NOTE: DNA testing has not confirmed Bobcat ancestry and this
breed is considered wholly domestic by registry.

REGISTERED WITH R.E.F.R
While the
Desert Lynx today is a completely domestic cat*, it is bred to resemble
the bobcat. Through generations of selective breeding with different
breeds of domestic cats, the breed has incorporated many characteristics
similar to those of the bobcat. Desert Lynx are medium in length with
longer hind legs, and toes may be tufted. They are very alert,
intelligent cats. Males are larger than females and slower to mature.
These cats come in both long and short hair.
The head
is large but not round, with a full, well-developed muzzle that is
almost square in appearance, with prominent whisker pads. The ears are
large and set wide apart, usually with feathering and tufts on the tip.
The wide set eyes are large and expressive, set at an angle, with
colors ranging from gold to green, with blue eyes in the snows.
The tail may be the length of the bobcat tail, which may come half way
to the ground, or it may be lacking entirely, as in the Manx, or
it may be any length in between. Desert Lynx come in three coat patterns
in all eumelanistic and melanistic colors--ebony, blue, sorrel, fawn,
chocolate, lilac, red, and cream --including silvers, cameos, sepias,
minks, and snows. The coat patterns are tawny (ticked), leopard
(spotted), and clouded leopard. Solid colored cats, as well as cats in
classic and mackerel tabby, do sometimes occur.
The
leopard pattern is a spotted tabby pattern. It is marked by spots of the
darker color, most prominent on the sides of the body and the belly. The
spots may vary in size and shape, but should be evenly distributed.
Preference is given to rosette spots which are formed by a part-circle
of spots around a distinctly lighter center. Contrast with ground color
may not be as distinct as in some spotted breeds . A dorsal stripe runs
the length of the body to the tip of the tail. The stripe is ideally
composed of spots. The markings on the face and forehead are typical
tabby markings, with the underside of the body having distinct spots.
Legs and tail are barred. In the sepia, mink, and snow subdivisions, it
is desirable for ghost leopard spots to appear on the bodies.
The tawny
pattern is a ticked tabby pattern marked by ticking on the body hair
with various shades of the marking color and ground color, with the
outer tipping being the darkest and the undercoat being the ground
color. The body may exhibit a barely perceptible spotted pattern. The
tail, legs, and face will have tabby penciling. Necklace tracings will
are also frequently seen.
The
clouded leopard pattern, while derived from modifications to the classic
tabby gene, is different from the classic tabby pattern, with as little
bull's eye similarities possible. The pattern gives the impression of
marble, preferably with a horizontal flow. Vertical stripes are
undesirable. Contrast should be good, with distinct shapes and sharp
edges. The belly must be spotted.
Outcrosses
to either unregistered or purebred cats are permitted. However, such
crosses should be carefully chosen to complement the overall type of the
Desert Lynx cat.
Desert
Lynx, Highland Lynx, Alpine Lynx, and Mohave Bobs are part of the Desert
Lynx breed group in the Rare & Exotic Feline Registry. In other words,
Mohave Bobs, Highland Lynx, Desert Lynx, and Alpine Lynx may be bred
together, with offspring registered as follows:
-
All white kittens (including straight and curled coats and straight
or curled ears) are registered as Alpine Lynx.
-
All non-white kittens with curled coats are registered as Mohave
Bobs.
-
All non-white kittens with straight coats and straight ears are
registered as Desert Lynx..
-
All non-white kittens with straight coats and curled ears are
registered as Highland Lynx.
The curled
ears of the Highland Lynx are caused by a dominant gene which both curls
the ears and somewhat reduces the size of the ears. When these breeds
are bred together, the straight-eared kittens resulting from the
breeding do not carry any genes for curled ears.
Non-white
kittens do not carry the gene for white color. Therefore, breeders
wishing to work with Desert Lynx only would not have to worry about
getting curled-eared recessive genes in Desert Lynx who have Highland
Lynx in their ancestry. Breeders not wishing to work with the Alpine
Lynx would not have to worry about white kittens as long as neither
parent is an Alpine Lynx.
The curled
coat is caused by a dominant gene. Breeders not wishing to work with
Mohave Bobs do not have to worry about this as long as neither of the
parents have curled coats.
These
breeds are identical in body type.
