(Redirected from Maltese tiger)
The 'Maltese tiger', or 'blue tiger', is a suspected
coloration morph of
tiger, reported mostly from the
Fujian Province of
China. It is said to have bluish fur with dark grey stripes. The term ''
Maltese'' comes from
domestic cat terminology for blue fur, and refers to the
slate grey coloration; the tigers have nothing to do with the island of
Malta.
Most of the Maltese tigers reported have been of the
South Chinese subspecies. The South Chinese tiger today is critically endangered, and the "blue"
alleles may be wholly extinct. However, "blue" tigers have also been reported from Korea, home of
Amur tigers.
Sightings
Around 1910, Harry R Caldwell, an American missionary and big game hunter, spotted and hunted a blue tiger outside
Fuzhou. His search is chronicled in his book ''Blue Tiger'' (1924)
[1], and by his hunting companion Roy Chapman Andrews in his ''Camps & Trails in China'' (1925, chapter VII).
[2]. Chapman cites Caldwell thus:
"The markings of the beast are strikingly beautiful. The ground color is of a delicate shade of maltese, changing into light gray-blue on the underparts. The stripes are well defined and like those of the ordinary yellow tiger."
-- Caldwell in Chapman (1925)
A more recent report, given to ''Mystery Cats of the World'' author Dr
Karl Shuker, comes from the son of a US Army soldier who served in
Korea during the
Korean War. His father sighted a blue tiger in the mountains near what is now the
Demilitarized Zone. Blue tigers have also been reported from
Burma.
A smokey blue
hypermelanic tiger cub was born in the
Oklahoma Zoo in 1964 to ordinary Bengal tiger parents. It died in infancy and is preserved as a wet specimen. There are no blue tigers in zoos or private collections, and no known blue tiger pelts.
The
black tiger was also long considered mythical, but several pelts have proven that pseudo-melanistic or hypermelanic tigers do exist. They are not wholly black, but have dense, wide stripes that partially obscure the orange background colour. The hypermelanic tiger cub born in captivity at Oklahoma City Zoo had a smokey hue between some of the stripes.
Genetics
:''See also:
Cat coat genetics''
In support of the blue tiger theory, Maltese-colored cats certainly do exist. The most common is a domestic breed, the
Russian Blue, but blue
bobcats and
lynxes have also been recorded, and there are genetic mutations and combinations that result in bluish hue, or at least in the impression of a blue-gray animal. Shuker suggested that blue tigers possessed two different pairs of recessive alleles - the non-agouti (s/s), and the dilute (d/d)
[3] which combine to produce a solid blue-gray colour as found in domestic cats such as the
British Shorthair and Russian Blue, but would not produce the striped blue tigers reported.
The result when simply combining non-agouti and dilute alleles would probably be a greyish tiger with little or no stripes, as normal tigers switch between agouti (orange) and non-agouti (black) in different areas of their pelage, as well as suppressing melanin production thoroughly (white). The non-agouti mutation would produce animals similar to
black panthers which have only a "ghost" pattern, all hair being black but the hairs of their rosettes retaining a different texture and thus, "black-on-black" rosettes are visible under appropriate lighting. Comnined with all-dilute alleles, this would still result in an unstriped or ghost-striped tiger.
For a maltese-striped fur,
pheomelanin production must probably be suppressed but agouti retained, to show the pattern; perhaps some hypermelanism would also be present, to produce an animal with a non-white belly as reported by Caldwell. Indeed, such a genotype is known in
cheetahs, where it produces animals that are bluish gray with dark slate grey pattern. If factors such as lighting conditions are accounted for, this makes a reasonable match with Caldwell's individual.
A variant expression of the non-inhibited pigment ("chinchilla ") allele - the allele in other contexts producing
white tigers - is also sometimes deemed possible. This would produce a "haze" effect over the whole body. Combined with a pheomelanin suppression, it would produce a white animal with light gray pattern; such specimens are also known in the Cheetah.
Possible Distribution
In small or isolated populations,
genetic drift can fix unusual traits such as aberrant coloration. A non-harmful mutation can soon become widespread in small, isolated populations. And if the mutant gene confers benefits, such as better camouflage, then affected individuals may out-compete those without the mutation; this would happen faster in a small
inbred population close to
panmixia.
External links
★
Article at Cryptzoology.com
★
Blue Tigers
★
The Cryptid Zoo: Blue and Black Tigers
References
1. Blue Tiger, , Harry R, Caldwell, Abingdon Press, 1924,
2. Camps & Trails in China: A Narrative of Exploration, Adventure, and Sport in Little-Known China, , Roy, Chapman Andrews, Appleton, 1925, HTML fulltext at Project Gutenberg
3. Mystery Cats of the World: From Blue Tigers To Exmoor Beasts, , Karl P N, Shuker, Robert Hale, 1989,