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Kazimiera
08-09-2013, 11:03 PM
Don’t be so fast to judge a cat by its color, study warns

Just like humans, domestic cats are often judged by their color, and the media and folklore help perpetuate these stereotypes. Take the snobbish, aloof, white kitty who promotes Fancy Feast cat food, and spooky images of black cats, which can be associated with bad luck and witches, especially around Halloween.

Black cats are often stereotyped due to superstitions

Interested in the link between how cat color influences adoption rates, a University of California, Berkeley, researcher surveyed 189 people with experience of cats as pets and found that they were more likely to assign positive personality traits to orange cats and less favorable ones to white and tortoiseshell ones. Orange cats were largely regarded as friendly, white cats as aloof and tortoiseshell cats as intolerant.

The results, published this week in the online issue of Anthrozoos, the official journal of the International Society for Anthrozoology, are noteworthy because feline typecasting can have a negative impact on adoption rates at animal shelters, the study suggests.

“To date there is little evidence that these perceived differences between differently colored cats actually exist, but there are serious repercussions for cats if people believe that some cat colors are friendlier than others,” said Mikel Delgado, lead author of the study and a doctoral student in psychology at UC Berkeley.

“We hope that this study will be a starting point for further research in what qualities affect adoption and retention of pet cats, and whether there is a genetic or physical basis (such as coat color) for personality differences in cats,” she added.

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Black cats are often stereotyped due to superstitions

Of an estimated 100 million domesticated cats in the United States, at least one million end up in shelters each year. Many are abandoned because their personalities conflict with their owners’ expectations. A 2002 study from UC Davis found that one in four cats are brought to shelters because they did not get along with their owners or other household pets. A common complaint was that they’re “too active.” That study also found that dark cats are more likely to be euthanized, and that tortoiseshell cats are frequently typecast as having too much attitude or “tortitude.”

“Previous research supports the existence of ‘black cat syndrome,’ where black and brown cats are less likely to be adopted than cats of other colors,” Delgado said. “We were interested in whether people’s perceptions of the interaction between personality and coat color might play a part.”

To establish a link between how cat color influences adoption rates, Delgado and her co-authors used Craigslist to recruit a national sample of cat owners and cat lovers in large U.S. metropolitan areas. Participants were asked to rate, on a scale of 1 to 7, the personalities of black, white, bi-colored, tri-colored (tortoiseshell or calico) and orange cats based on their tendencies to be active, aloof, bold, calm, friendly, intolerant, shy, stubborn, tolerant and trainable.

While most people surveyed said personality informs their decision about which cat to adopt, the characteristics they ascribed to cats based on their coat color indicated that color consciously or unconsciously played a key role in their final choice of which kitty to take home.

Overall, orange cats and bi-colored cats were characterized as friendly, while black cats, white cats and tri-colored cats were regarded as more antisocial. White cats were considered to be more shy, lazy and calm, while tortoiseshell cats were more likely to be depicted as both more intolerant and more trainable. Black cats were typified as having less extreme character traits, which might contribute to their mysterious reputation.

At the Berkeley East Bay Humane Society (BEBHS), cat coordinator Cathy Marden is all too familiar with the psychology involved in pet adoptions. Staff members and volunteers there try to break down stereotypes at every opportunity, she said, and descriptions of each cat written on the adoption rooms cages highlight the individual’s characteristics.

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“You can’t judge a cat by its color,” she said. “If someone comes in to adopt, we encourage them to spend time with all the cats, because it’s the personality of that cat – not the color – that will let you know if the animal’s the right fit for you.”

Still, reactions to black cats can be so strong, she said, that few adoptions take place at the shelter when there are more than a few black cats in the adoption room. “It’s a huge bummer,” said Marden, who has blogged on the BEBHS website about the “Top 10 Reasons to Adopt a Black Cat” and about the joys of adopting a monochromatic cat.

Domestic cats are believed to be descended from African wild cats and have coexisted peacefully with humans for 4,000 years. Through literature, movies and other cultural channels, cats have long been characterized as solitary, independent species who are “tolerant of affection only when it suits their needs,” according to the study. That said, cats have adapted well to a variety of living conditions, and this has made them successful at cohabiting with humans, the study points out.


Source: http://newscenter.berkeley.edu/2012/10/23/cat-color/

Smaug
08-09-2013, 11:06 PM
Racism agains Cat Brodars! Down with White cats!

Graham
08-09-2013, 11:09 PM
Black cats are associated with good luck! Silly Americans changed that.

Smaug
08-09-2013, 11:12 PM
Celtic Cats > Germanic Cats.

Kazimiera
09-24-2013, 11:11 PM
Black cats unlucky at shelters

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NEW YORK — Dozens of cats were lined up in cages at a Petco in Old Bridge, N.J., on a recent Saturday afternoon, much as they are most weekends at adoption events and shelters across the country. Percy tumbled playfully, while Parker snoozed in his litter pan, curled up with his cage mate, Alexandra. Chester gamboled about nearby.

Alexandra, a calico, and Chester, a brown tabby, received adoption applications, but Percy and Parker weren't so lucky. They're at a significant disadvantage in the adoption market, because they're black.

"Black cats don't get adopted nearly as frequently as other colors," said Kathleen Fram, the co-chair of adoptions for the Summit Animal Rescue Association, or S.A.R.A., a nonprofit rescue group. "People just pass them by."

A 2002 study in the Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science that examined adoption rates over nine months in a California pound found that black cats were about half as likely to be adopted as tabby cats and two-thirds less likely than white cats. But for cats in general, the odds are not good: of the approximately 3,000 cats of all colors offered for adoption during that time, only around 600, or 20 percent, found homes. Those remaining were euthanized.

Nationally, the Humane Society estimates that three to four million cats enter shelters each year, said Nancy Peterson, the feral cat program manager at the Humane Society headquarters in Washington, D.C. Of that number, only half are adopted. The rest, including disproportionate numbers of the less-adoptable black cats, are euthanized.

Black cats are considered bad luck in most Western cultures and have been associated with witchcraft for centuries. They've been portrayed in literature as everything from T.S. Elliot's clever, phenomenal, "Magical Mr. Mistoffelees" to Edgar Allen Poe's "The Black Cat," vilified by his master as "the hideous beast whose craft seduced me into murder."

While the cats themselves may not cause bad luck, they are certainly unlucky. And from an evolutionary point of view, this misfortune is a genetic accident. At some point in their evolution, a mutation developed in the domestic cat's genetic code that caused the familiar stripes on cat hair to be replaced by solid black, reported a 2003 study in "Current Biology" by the scientists involved in the National Cancer Institute's Feline Genome Project.

A black cat gets its coat from a combination of the dominant form of the "brown" gene, which controls the darkness of the hair pigment; a dominant "dense" gene, ensuring complete coverage of the hair; and the mutated, recessive "agouti" gene, that normally would produce banding on the hair, said Dr. Marilyn Menotti-Raymond, a staff scientist at Institute's Laboratory of Genetic Diversity and one of the study's authors.

Partial mapping of the cat genome was announced in November 2007, and the full sequence should be completed by early summer, said Menotti-Raymond. Once complete, the genome may prove invaluable in understanding and treating hereditary diseases, both in cats and in humans. They have already isolated the gene that causes a form of retinal atrophy in cats: the same gene, independent research has shown, causes the condition in humans.

Scientists also hope to find the genes that determine a cat's patterning. "We don't yet know why the tiger gets its stripes," Menotti-Raymond said.

While a black coat is advantageous for a nocturnal hunter, it's unfortunate for a domesticated cat seeking a home. An obvious reason would be superstition, but S.A.R.A's Fram disagrees. "I don't think it's witchcraft or anything," she said. "I think it's because they're plain."

It is common practice among rescue organizations to stop allowing black cat adoptions during October, to prevent them from being used as party props and returned, or, as urban legend has it, sacrificed on Halloween. "We don't adopt our black kitties out during October. We just won't take that chance," said Kathy Jentsch of the Purr-fect Sanctuary, a shelter in Hector, Ark.

But some shelters are working to change a black cat's luck, said the Humane Society's Peterson, by featuring them prominently at adoption events.

And the Web site of the Kitten Rescue group lists the top 10 reasons to adopt a black cat. Number nine: "A lint brush isn't required for a black-tie affair." Number eight: "Holding a black cat is very slimming." And the number one reason to adopt a black cat? "They are the least likely to be adopted."


Source: http://seattletimes.com/html/living/2004374431_blackcats28.html

Manifest Destiny
09-24-2013, 11:20 PM
All of our cats came from shelters. We pick the ones that seem the friendliest, not with certain colors of fur. We have a black cat who is very friendly and playful.

larali
09-24-2013, 11:41 PM
I have an orange tabby. I love orange, but the reason we got him was because he was sitting in his litter box with his paws tucked under in the funniest way. He still does that sometimes.

Black cats are lovely, I've owned them in the past.

Farah
09-25-2013, 11:47 PM
I feel so bad for those black/dark cats. :( I used to like cats from before, but after adopting one from the shelter, now I actually feel my heart hurts when I see cats stuck in shelters or starving in the streets. It's like how they say a person changes after they have a child, but I feel this also occurs to an extent with animals when you own one and get attached to them. We adopted our cat for her affectionate behavior too even though she is quite dark for a cat [greyish-dark brown]. It's truly silly though that the superstition about black cats still lives on. :/