Savannah Cat Breed Information Breeders Kittens Australia

Savannah Cat

The Savannah Cat is a new and quite rare exotic domestic cat breed the result of a crossing an African Serval and a domestic cat.

Generations
As Savannahs are produced by crossbreeding servals and domestic cats, each generation of Savannahs is marked with a filial number. Cats produced directly from a Serval/domestic cat cross are the F1 generation, they are typically 50% serval (although if you use a F1 Savannah as the domestic cat, the percentage of serval blood jumps to 75%). The F2 generation, which has a serval grandparent and is the offspring of the F1 generation, is 25% serval. The F3 generation has a serval great grandparent, and is 12.5% serval. They can be very expensive to purchase because of their scarcity.

Male Savannah cats are typically sterile until the F5 generation or so, although the females are fertile from the F1 generation and on.(Go girls!)

Characteristics
Savannahs tend to be one of the larger breeds of cats, ranging up to 32 pounds (2 to 3 times heavier than your average domestic cat). The earlier generations, F1's to F3's or so, tend to be larger than the later generations, with males generally bigger than females. From F4 generations onwards, weights drop to into the more normal but still high range, the breed remains taller and lankier than most domestic breeds.

The bodies of Savannahs are long and leggy - when a Savannah is sitting, their hind legs are usually higher than their spine, like a Cheetah. Their heads are longer than they are wide, and like their serval ancestors, they have long necks. They also tend to have spots on their ears, and their tails are about 3/4ths the length of other cats' tails.

The coat of a Savannah depends a lot on the breed of cat used for the domestic cross. Early generations always have some form of dark spotting on a lighter coat, as many breeders employed 'wild' looking spotted breeds such as the Bengal and Egyptian Mau for the cross to preserve these markings in later generations. The Savannah can have a tan coat with black or brownish spots, or a silver coat with dark spots, a marble pattern, and many other patterns and combinations, although the TICA breed standard limits member cats to Black, Brown Spotted Tabby, Silver Spotted Tabby and Black Smoke types only.

Behaviors
Temperamentally, Savannahs have been compared to dogs in their loyalty, and they will follow their owners around the house like a canine. They greet people with head-butts or sometimes pounces out of nowhere (warn your guests!)They have a lot of energy and are social animals that do well with both cats and dogs.

Owners of Savannahs say that they are impressed with the intelligence of this breed of cat. Savannahs have been known to solve all sorts of complex problems; they may learn how to open doors, cupboards.... anyone buying a Savannah will definitely have to 'Savannah-proof' the house to prevent their pet from getting into things it shouldn't. Many owners have trained their Savannahs to walk on a harness and do various tricks like fetching toys.

Unlike most domestic cats, Savannahs usually like water, they will jump right into the bathtub or shower with people sometimes, and get into pools and streams like their wild ancestors.

Vocally, like their serval parents and grandparents, Savannah cats normally "chirp" instead of meow.

Care
Savannah cats have no special care or food requirements; they can eat cat food like any other domestic cat, use the litterbox, and a normal veterinarian is qualified to care for one that needs a checkup or is sick.

Note:- this breed is not avilable in Australia




Other relevant pages - Savannah Cat
We are looking for business relating to the category Savannah Breeders to list in our directory. If you operate such a business, please click here and add your business.
<< Previous Russian Blue | Back to Cat Breeds | Next >> Scottish Fold


Featured Articles
Greyhound Greyhound
The Greyhound is believed to be the fastest dog in
Tiger Horse
"Shere ahraha hai" (The Tiger is coming). Words th
Live-bearing aquarium fish - livebearers Live-bearing aquarium fish - livebearers
For fish fanatics, there is nothing more satisfyin
Beauceron Beauceron
The Beauceron is a French herding dog, also known