JMartJr
Senior Member.
I am afraid this may be right. But as a person of Scots descent, and a True Scotsman at heart, I support them when I can -- no True Scotsman could do otherwise!Yeah, the Scottish wildcat is probably a goner, sadly.
I am afraid this may be right. But as a person of Scots descent, and a True Scotsman at heart, I support them when I can -- no True Scotsman could do otherwise!Yeah, the Scottish wildcat is probably a goner, sadly.
As a Scot, I concur. But as one of the millions of cat lovers in the world, I see no possibility of @Skalman 's suggested draconian measures of house cat control as being likely. I wonder if the wildcats interbreeding with house cats is because of the scarcity of finding another wildcat to breed with. In other words, interbreeding of necessity because in many locales there is no longer a viable wildcat population.I am afraid this may be right. But as a person of Scots descent, and a True Scotsman at heart, I support them when I can -- no True Scotsman could do otherwise!
Is the Kellas wild cat different than the Scots wild cat?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kellas_catExternal Quote:The Kellas cat is a large black cat found in Scotland. It is an interspecific hybrid between the Scottish wildcat (Felis silvestris silvestrissyn. Felis silvestris grampia) and the domestic cat (Felis catus). Once thought to be a mythological wild cat, with its few sightings dismissed as hoaxes, a specimen was killed in a snare by a gamekeeper in 1984 and found to be a hybrid between the Scottish wildcat and domestic cat.
your article saysI wonder if the wildcats interbreeding with house cats is because of the scarcity of finding another wildcat to breed with. In other words, interbreeding of necessity because in many locales there is no longer a viable wildcat population.
Article: This shift may have occurred for a variety of reasons, including a rise in domestic cat ownership and habitat destruction.When humans deforested large patches of Scottish forest, wildcats were forced into environments closer to humans, where they were more likely to come in contact with a house cat, the authors write in the Conversation.
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Interestingly, this same interbreeding that is diluting wildcat genes might have actually saved the species from going extinct sooner—through genetic mixing, wildcats gained house cats' ability to fight diseases such as feline leukemia and feline immunodeficiency virus, per Science. Still, the only reason they would have been exposed to those diseases in the first place would have been from house cats