I have a question/request!Well, not exactly a question. I just want to know your opinion about this sksksksksksk
So! Moscow mutation. A seemingly unofficial mutation found in Moscow, said in
http://messybeast.com/roan-tweed.htm "It appears that the normal banding of the hairs has failed, leaving the tabby markings grey or roan, and leaving the background almost white." I found no further information about this phenomenon, and I thought maybe we can interpret them loosely while there's no more concrete gene for them yet xD
What I catch from the photo taken is that it's almost like the colors for the tabby and the base got flipped, tabby being brighter than the base (for this case, the tabby got white on the body except tail). Which doesn't quite match with the quote I took up there. And it doesn't look like roan/vitiligo where the white spread progresses. But may they be flipped or not, it seems like the markings don't even look like normal tabby (be it classic/marbled/rosettes). So if it isn't a roan/vitiligo, it could be a white-spotting anomaly similar to thai-white and topaz-white?
Whichever the case may be, I wanted to try and picture what might happen to the mutation's visual on different possible coats. There are two possibilities of what the cat pictured may be (amateur guessing, don't take it too seriously lol)
1. Black barless ticked tabby (assuming no barring on the legs). This would mean the mutation only overrides the pelt like other white-spottings/mutations, not affecting the tabby directly
2. Black classic/rosettes/sokoke? tabby. This would mean the mutation overrides the tabby directly, changing how their colors work except for the tail?
3. Could be a combo between 1 and 2, a white-spotting anomaly that resides beneath tabby markings
Honestly no. 3 makes more sense, but I don't know which would actually be true.