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Tabby, Tuxedo & Calico Cat Pattern Types Edmonton

Five tabby variants and three other patterns dominate Edmonton rescue cats. Tabby (mackerel, classic, spotted, ticked, patched/torbie), tuxedo (black-and-white bicolor), calico (orange plus black plus white), and tortoiseshell (orange plus black, no white). These are coat patterns, not breeds. Most rescue cats are Domestic Shorthair with the pattern. This guide walks through what each looks like, what genetics produces it, and how often it appears at Edmonton rescue intake.

13 min read · Updated June 9, 2026
Author: LocalPetFinder Team

The short answer

Eight pattern families dominate Edmonton rescue cats. Tabby comes in five variants (mackerel, classic, spotted, ticked, patched/torbie); mackerel is the wild-type ancestral pattern and the most common at intake. Tuxedo is the black-and-white bicolor pattern, available in any base colour. Calico is orange plus black plus white (tri-colour). Tortoiseshell is orange plus black without white. These are coat patterns, not breeds: most rescue cats at Edmonton Humane Society, Zoe's Animal Rescue, SCARS, and AARCS Edmonton are Domestic Shorthair with the pattern. Pattern identification matters because it helps you describe what you want to adopt.

Four cats showing the dominant Edmonton rescue coat patterns: mackerel tabby with vertical stripes, tuxedo with black-and-white markings, calico with orange and black and white tri-colour, and tortoiseshell with orange and black mosaic
The four most common Edmonton rescue cat patterns: mackerel tabby, tuxedo, calico, and tortoiseshell. Pattern is what you can see; breed is paperwork.

Pattern vs breed: the distinction

Before going through each pattern, the most useful framing: pattern is what you can see on the cat; breed is paperwork. A tabby cat at an Edmonton rescue is not a tabby breed. Tabby is the coat-and-marking expression of the agouti gene combined with a base coat colour. The same is true for tuxedo, calico, and tortoiseshell. They are patterns, not breeds.

Most cats at Edmonton rescues are Domestic Shorthair (DSH) or Domestic Longhair (DLH) with a pattern. A real breed (Maine Coon, Bengal, Abyssinian, Persian, Siamese) requires CFA or TICA pedigree paperwork with both parents documented. Without paperwork, a tabby cat is a tabby DSH or DLH, regardless of how breed-shaped the cat looks. This matters at adoption time because the breed label on a rescue listing is foster shorthand for the visual look, not verified ancestry. The pattern label, on the other hand, is what the cat actually shows.

For the practical Edmonton adoption decision, pattern identification is what you use to communicate preferences to the foster home or intake coordinator. Saying you want a mackerel tabby kitten or a tortoiseshell female lets the rescue match you to specific cats in care. Saying you want a Maine Coon at a $150 to $500 adoption fee usually does not, because real Maine Coons in Edmonton rescue networks are rare. Pedigree breed standards are maintained by registries like the Cat Fanciers' Association and The International Cat Association; without paperwork from these registries, a cat is not a pedigreed breed.

The pattern families at a glance

PatternLookSex biasEdmonton intake
Tabby (5 variants)M forehead, stripes / swirls / spots / ticked banding / patchedNoneMultiple per week (mackerel dominant)
TuxedoBlack with white chest, paws, often face maskNoneEvery couple of weeks
CalicoOrange + black/grey + white tri-colour patchesNearly always femaleEvery few weeks (peak: kitten season May to October)
TortoiseshellOrange + black/grey mosaic, no whiteNearly always femaleRoughly half as often as calico

The tabby family: five variants

Tabby is the most common cat pattern in the world. Every tabby cat carries the dominant agouti (A) gene that produces the banded-hair effect and the M forehead marking. The five variants differ in how the body markings express on top of the agouti base. All five are common enough at Edmonton rescues that adopters can pick by preference, though mackerel dominates intake by a wide margin.

Mackerel tabby (the ancestral wild-type)

Narrow vertical stripes running from the spine down toward the belly in a fishbone pattern (mackerel is the fish reference). Mackerel is the wild-type ancestral tabby: it expresses by default when the Taqpep gene is unmutated. Because mackerel is the default, it dominates Edmonton rescue intake. You will see multiple mackerel tabbies per week across Edmonton Humane Society, Zoe's Animal Rescue, SCARS, and AARCS Edmonton listings during peak kitten season (May to October). The mackerel pattern shows on any base coat colour: brown mackerel tabby, grey mackerel tabby, orange mackerel tabby (very common in male cats), and silver mackerel tabby are all common. The M forehead marking is always present.

Classic (blotched) tabby

Bold swirls, whorls, and an ox-eye or bullseye marking on the flanks. Classic tabby is the mutated Taqpep variant: a recessive mutation in the Transmembrane Aminopeptidase Q (Taqpep) gene converts the mackerel fishbone pattern into broader blotched swirls. Classic tabby is less common than mackerel at Edmonton rescues but still appears regularly. The bullseye marking on each flank is the signature feature. Brown classic tabby is the iconic look, but classic expresses on any base colour.

Spotted tabby

Broken stripes that read as spots, or solid spots distributed across the body. Spotted tabby ranges from simple round spots on a tabby base (common in Domestic Shorthairs) to dramatic rosettes (in Bengal and Bengal-influenced lines). Most spotted DSH at Edmonton rescues show the simple spotted variant, not Bengal-style rosettes. A spotted DSH labelled as a Bengal mix at an Edmonton rescue is almost always a regular spotted Domestic Shorthair without verifiable Bengal ancestry; real Bengals require CFA or TICA F-generation paperwork. The M forehead marking is present, and faint stripes often remain on the legs and tail.

Ticked (agouti) tabby

Banded individual hairs with no distinct body stripes. The agouti banding produces a salt-and-pepper or shimmering look at a distance; up close in good light, the colour bands on each hair are visible. Ticked is the Abyssinian-style coat. At Edmonton rescues, ticked is the rarest of the tabby variants because most Domestic Shorthair populations carry the more dominant mackerel or classic patterns. A ticked tabby DSH at an Edmonton rescue usually points to Abyssinian or Somali ancestry somewhere in the family tree.

Patched tabby (torbie)

Tabby plus tortoiseshell. A patched tabby (or torbie) has the orange-and-black mosaic of a tortoiseshell with visible tabby stripes inside the orange and black patches. Both the agouti tabby gene and the X-linked orange gene are expressing together. Patched tabbies are nearly always female (X-linkage rule). Edmonton rescues see torbies occasionally; the foster home note often reads tortoiseshell tabby or patched tabby. Adding the white-spotting (S) gene produces a calico tabby, sometimes called caliby.

The five tabby variants share three universal features: the M-shaped forehead marking, the agouti gene expression producing banded hairs, and faint leg or tail markings even when the body markings differ. The Taqpep gene controls the switch between mackerel (wild-type) and classic (mutated). Kaelin and colleagues published the genetic mechanism in Science (2012) in a paper titled Specifying and sustaining pigmentation patterns in domestic and wild cats. The same Taqpep mechanism produces the king cheetah blotched pattern in big cats.

Tuxedo: the bicolor pattern

Tuxedo is a black coat with distinctive white markings on the chest, paws, and often the face. The look mimics formal wear: a white shirt-front and gloves on a black body. Genetically, tuxedo is produced by the white-spotting gene (S locus) acting on a solid black base coat. The white-spotting gene is dominant and has variable expression, which produces a range of bicolor patterns depending on how much white shows.

Tuxedo is not breed-restricted. Any cat carrying the white-spotting gene plus a solid base coat can show the tuxedo pattern. Most Edmonton rescue tuxedos are Domestic Shorthair or Domestic Longhair mixes. Tuxedo appears in both sexes equally because the white-spotting gene is not X-linked. At Edmonton rescue intake, tuxedo shows up every couple of weeks across Edmonton Humane Society, Zoe's, and AARCS Edmonton.

Sub-types of bicolor based on how much white shows include:

  • Van pattern: mostly white with colour limited to the head and tail.
  • Harlequin: white body with random colour patches.
  • Mitted: white paws and a white chest patch only, with the rest of the body solid colour.
  • Standard tuxedo: the typical chest-and-paws white-marking distribution that the term most commonly refers to.

Calico vs tortoiseshell: the X-linked patterns

FeatureCalicoTortoiseshell
ColoursOrange + black/grey + whiteOrange + black/grey only
White spotting (S)Yes (large patches)No (or minimal)
LookBold colour blocksMottled blend
Sex biasNearly always femaleNearly always female
Edmonton frequencyEvery few weeksRoughly half as often

Calico and tortoiseshell are closely related patterns that adopters often confuse. The genetic mechanism is the same; the visible difference is white. Both rely on the X-linked orange gene to express the orange-plus-black mosaic, which is why both are nearly always female. The full genetic depth (including why male calicos are about 1 in 3,000) is covered in our Edmonton calico genetics article.

Calico shows orange plus black (or grey) plus white in distinct patches. The orange-and-black mosaic comes from X-inactivation (lyonization). The white comes from the white-spotting (S) gene adding patches on top. Pattern is highly individual; no two calicos look identical.

Tortoiseshell (tortie) shows the same orange-and-black mosaic without white. Patterns blend into a denser mottled appearance. Same X-linkage as calico, so almost always female. Torties carry a popular myth about feisty tortitude, with mixed research evidence.

Browse pattern cats at Edmonton rescues

Live cat listings from Edmonton Humane Society, Zoe's Animal Rescue, SCARS, and AARCS Edmonton fosters. Filter by colour and pattern, see foster notes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the 5 types of tabby cat patterns?

Mackerel tabby has narrow vertical stripes running from the spine down to the belly in a fishbone pattern; this is the wild-type ancestral tabby and the most common pattern at Edmonton rescues. Classic (or blotched) tabby has swirls, whorls, and an ox-eye or bullseye marking on the flanks; it results from a mutation in the Taqpep gene. Spotted tabby has broken stripes or solid spots across the body; most spotted Domestic Shorthairs are simple spotted rather than Bengal-style. Ticked (or agouti) tabby has banded individual hairs and no distinct body stripes, the Abyssinian-style coat. Patched tabby (also called torbie) is tabby plus tortoiseshell, with orange patches on a tabby base. All five variants share the M-shaped forehead marking and the agouti gene that expresses the tabby pattern.

What is the most common tabby pattern at Edmonton rescues?

Mackerel tabby dominates intake at Edmonton Humane Society, Zoe's Animal Rescue, SCARS, and AARCS Edmonton. Mackerel is the wild-type ancestral pattern, which means it expresses by default unless a Taqpep mutation produces classic or spotted variants. You will see multiple mackerel tabbies per week across Edmonton rescue listings during kitten season (May to October). Classic tabby is the next most common. Spotted is less common, and ticked (Abyssinian-style) is rare unless an individual cat carries Abyssinian-influenced ancestry. If you want a tabby kitten from an Edmonton rescue, mackerel is the practical default; the Edmonton foster home pairs pattern with temperament in the listing notes.

What is the M forehead marking on a tabby?

The distinctive M-shaped marking above the eyes on every tabby cat. The M is a universal feature of the tabby pattern across all variants (mackerel, classic, spotted, ticked, patched) because it is part of how the agouti pattern expresses on the face. Various legends attribute the M to religious or mythological origins (the Virgin Mary blessing a cat in Christian lore, the prophet Muhammad in Islamic lore, ancient Egyptian Bast worship), but the genetic explanation is simply that the agouti expression produces the marking consistently. If you see an M on the forehead, the cat is a tabby; if there is no visible M, the cat is either non-tabby or carries a solid-overlay pattern hiding the M.

What is the difference between mackerel and classic tabby?

Mackerel tabby has narrow vertical stripes running from the spine down toward the belly in a fishbone pattern. Classic (or blotched) tabby has bold swirls, whorls, and an ox-eye or bullseye marking on the flanks. The difference is genetic: the Taqpep gene (Transmembrane Aminopeptidase Q) controls which pattern expresses. Wild-type Taqpep produces mackerel, the ancestral pattern. A mutation in Taqpep produces classic. Research published in Science in 2012 by Kaelin and colleagues identified the same Taqpep gene as the mechanism controlling coat patterning in cheetahs (king cheetah blotched pattern). So the difference between mackerel and classic in your Edmonton rescue cat is essentially the same genetic switch that distinguishes king cheetahs from standard cheetahs.

What is a tuxedo cat?

A bicolor pattern with mostly black coat plus distinctive white markings on the chest, paws, and often the face. The look resembles a formal tuxedo with white shirt-front and gloves. Genetically, tuxedo is produced by the white-spotting gene (S locus) on a solid base coat. Tuxedo is not a breed; it is a pattern that appears in any breed but most commonly in Domestic Shorthair and Domestic Longhair mixes at Edmonton rescues. Sub-types include Van (mostly white with colour on head and tail), Harlequin (white with random patches), and Mitted (white paws and chest only). Tuxedo appears in both sexes equally because the white-spotting gene is not sex-linked.

Can a tuxedo cat be any colour?

Yes. The tuxedo pattern is the bicolor white-spotting effect on a solid base coat, and the base coat can be any colour. Black-tuxedo is the classic look (most common at Edmonton rescues), but grey-tuxedo, brown-tabby-tuxedo, orange-tuxedo, and even tortoiseshell-tuxedo all exist. The white-spotting gene operates independently of the base coat colour gene, so any colour combined with white spotting produces a bicolor pattern. The label tuxedo is typically reserved for the specific chest-and-paw white-marking distribution that mimics formal wear.

What is the difference between calico and tortoiseshell?

White. Calico is a tri-colour pattern (orange plus black or grey plus white) where the white-spotting (S) gene adds white patches to the orange-and-black mosaic. Tortoiseshell (tortie) is the same orange-and-black mosaic without the white (or with minimal white). Both patterns rely on X-linked orange-gene genetics, which is why both are nearly always female (covered in depth in our Edmonton calico genetics article). At Edmonton rescues, calico shows up every few weeks; tortoiseshell appears roughly half as often because the white-spotting expansion produces a more visually distinctive cat that adopters notice.

What is a dilute calico?

A calico whose base colours are softened by the dilute (D) gene. A standard calico shows orange plus black plus white. A dilute calico shows cream (diluted orange) plus blue or grey (diluted black) plus white. The pattern distribution is identical; only the colour intensity differs. The dilute gene is recessive, so both parents need to carry it for a dilute calico kitten to express. Dilute calicos are less common than standard calicos at Edmonton rescue intake but appear regularly across the year. The same dilute mechanism produces dilute tortoiseshells (blue-cream torties) without white.

What is a torbie or patched tabby?

Tortoiseshell tabby. A torbie has the tortoiseshell pattern (orange plus black mosaic) with visible tabby stripes on the orange and black patches. Both the agouti tabby gene and the X-linked orange gene are expressing together, so the cat shows both the mosaic-patches look of a tortie and the stripes-and-whorls look of a tabby within those patches. Torbies are nearly always female (same X-linked rule as torties and calicos). Edmonton rescues see torbies occasionally; the foster home note often reads tortoiseshell tabby or patched tabby rather than torbie because the informal term is not universal. Torbie with white (torbie plus the S gene) produces a calico tabby (also called caliby).

Is a tabby Maine Coon at an Edmonton rescue actually a Maine Coon?

Almost never. A real Maine Coon requires CFA or TICA pedigree paperwork from a registered breeder with both parents documented. A cat described as a tabby Maine Coon at an Edmonton rescue is realistically a Domestic Shorthair or Domestic Longhair with the tabby pattern plus a medium-to-large body size that resembles the Maine Coon look. The cat may carry partial Maine Coon ancestry from somewhere in the family tree, or it may just be a large tabby DSH or DLH. Pattern is what you can see on the cat. Breed is paperwork. For rescue adopters, the practical answer is to treat the cat as a tabby DSH or DLH and budget accordingly: $150 to $500 adoption fee at Edmonton rescues, full vetting included.

Can I DNA test my Edmonton cat to identify the pattern?

You can test for the underlying coat colour genetics, but pattern is usually obvious from looking at the cat. The Wisdom Panel cat DNA test (around $130 USD) reports breed percentages plus coat colour markers. UC Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory (vgl.ucdavis.edu) offers more targeted coat colour and pattern tests including agouti, Taqpep (mackerel vs classic), dilute, and orange-locus testing. For most adopters, DNA testing for pattern is unnecessary because pattern shows on the cat. DNA testing is more useful for confirming breed influence (Bengal, Abyssinian, Maine Coon) or for breeding programs that need parent verification.

How do I find a specific pattern at an Edmonton rescue?

Tell the foster home or intake coordinator what pattern you want and they will match you. Mackerel tabby is always available because it is the dominant pattern at Edmonton intake. Calico female is available every few weeks during kitten season (May to October), less often outside it. Tortoiseshell female is available roughly twice a month. Tuxedo (both sexes) is available every couple of weeks. Ticked tabby is rare and may take months to source. The most efficient route is to sign up for new-cat email alerts from Edmonton Humane Society, Zoe's, SCARS, and AARCS Edmonton, and to specify your pattern preference plus temperament fit. Foster notes describe both pattern and personality, so adopters can match on both axes rather than fixating on pattern alone.

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