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State Animals and Mammals

State Mammals & Animals

 

 

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Maryland State CatMaryland State Cat: Calico Cat

Calico Cat

(Felis catus)
Adopted  on October 1, 2001

 

 

Effective October 1, 2001, the calico cat, Felis catus,  became the official cat of Maryland (Chapter 194, Acts of 2001; Code State Government Article, sec. 13-317).

 

Its colors of orange, black, and white are shared with the Baltimore oriole (State bird) and the Baltimore Checkerspot butterfly (State insect).

 

Description of the Maryland State Cat

Calico is not a breed of cat, but an unusual coloring occurring across many breeds, including Domestic Short-hair, Persian, and Manx. Virtually all calico cats are female; a male calico is a genetic anomaly and usually sterile. Producing calico kittens through selective breeding also is nearly impossible due to unpredictable actions of genes and chromosomes when cells multiply in a feline fetus.

 A calico cat must be a tri-color, with its three colors in distinct patches, not mixed as in a tortoiseshell cat. Some breed standards specify what percentage of the body must be white; others allow tabby striping in the color patches. To be a true tri-color, a calico cat's colors must be: white; red or cream; and black, blue, chocolate, lilac, cinnamon, or fawn. The variations in color from red and black are caused by a gene which dilutes, or lightens up the basic color, and produces a dilute calico cat, most commonly with a coat of white, cream, and blue.

Taxonomic Hierarchy of the Calico Cat
Kingdom Animalia -- animals
Phylum Chordata -- chordates
Subphylum Vertebrata -- vertebrates
Class Mammalia
Order Carnivora
Family Felidae
Genus Felis
Species Felis catus

 

 

 

 

State Animals and Mammals

State Mammals & Animals

 

Mammals are one group of animals. Bears, monkeys and dolphins are mammals. So are humans. But what makes a mammal a mammal?

 

an·i·mal (ān'ə-məl)
n.


1. A multicellular organism of the kingdom Animalia, differing from plants in certain typical characteristics such as capacity for locomotion, nonphotosynthetic metabolism, pronounced response to stimuli, restricted growth, and fixed bodily structure.
2. An animal organism other than a human, especially a mammal.

 

mam·mal (mām'əl)
n.

 

Any of various warm-blooded vertebrate animals of the class Mammalia, including humans, characterized by a covering of hair on the skin and, in the female, milk-producing mammary glands for nourishing the young.
 

 

 

 

 

 
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