The Prestwick-Beresford Old-Style Siamese
Breed Preservation Society
Why Preserve the Old-Style
Siamese?
Many people prefer the moderate, mildly rounded
appearance of the Old-Style Siamese to the extreme, highly elongated,
angular appearance of the modern Siamese. It's like preferring art by
Russell or Remington to
art by Picasso. We know that Siamese were more variable in appearance
one
hundred years ago than they are today and the decision to breed for one
specific
ultra-Oriental look was just an arbitrary one. Some of us now find that
we
just don’t like our Siamese to look like Vogue models. We’d rather that
they
retained a more moderate Oriental build.
Another important reason to keep breeding the
Old-Style Siamese is to preserve healthy genetic diversity within the
Siamese breed overall. The ultra-Oriental Siamese shown in the big cat
associations tend to be descended over and over again from the same
handful of top show champion studs. While this has allowed contemporary
Siamese breeders to achieve greater consistency in the appearance of
today’s Siamese and while it has allowed them to achieve ever-greater
heights of perfection in color, pattern contrast, and extreme Oriental
type, it is potentially dangerous.
In producing cats that are cosmetic clones of each
other, breeders have also inadvertently cloned some genetic defects.
It's unavoidable. Most genetic defects are subtle and cannot be
recognized at birth or are not evident in every cat that inherits the
defect. Breeders cannot recognize and eliminate subtle or
late-appearing defects from their breeding cats. For
example, a defect that shortens the lifespan of a cat by four years
would not be noticed by most breeders, or if noticed, not in time to
affect their breeding decisions. Indeed, most breeders quit breeding
after only five
to ten years. Cloning cats from the same show champion ancestors sooner
or later will result in every Siamese carrying the same defects, which
greatly
increases the likelihood of their offspring inheriting the defects in
full
force (homozygous form).
This has already happened in many breeds of dog.
Dogs have been intensively selectively bred for much longer than cats.
Eighty-five percent of Collies now carry a genetic defect that can
cause defective vision or blindness. Or take Cavalier Spaniels. The
longstanding official estimate is that 50% of Cavaliers carry a defect
that causes mitral valve disease
with its associated heart damage and septicemia. Breeders say that
currently
it appears that about 80-90% of Cavalier Spaniels are affected. Where
the
breed once lived on average to be 15 to 17 years old, now the average
age
at death is more like 8 or 9 years old. For cat lovers the time to take
action
is NOW. We need to prevent what has happened to the dog breeds from
happening to our cats.
Even if cats could be perfectly healthy, without
defects, and all alike, they would still be in trouble. They could fall
prey to new, deadly diseases. That’s because among identical cats there
are not any cats with unusual mutations or traits that can give the
breed resistance to a
brand new disease.
The Old-Style Siamese tend to have a more varied set
of ancestors than their ultra-Oriental cousins. They share the same
original Siamese ancestors that modern Siamese have, but the Old-Style
Siamese tend to have many different ancestors than their cousins as
well. Many of those ancestors were discarded from the breeding programs
that produced today's CFA show Siamese because they did not have the
desired extreme body type traits. Thus, their traits, including
possibly valuable noncosmetic traits, were lost from the modern Siamese
lines and survived only in the breeding programs of non-mainstream
breeders. The Old-Style Siamese are a potential source of genetic
diversity and they provide survival insurance to the entire Siamese
breed.
Why should you join PREOSSIA and help us
promote
the Old-Style Siamese?
The Old-Style Siamese will not continue to exist
unless people know about them, talk about them, make movies about them,
write about them, and continue to buy kittens or adopt retired adults
from breeders. Also, they will not continue to exist unless some new
people join the ranks of breeders and work together to maintain the
genetic health of the cats. Right now the Old-Style Siamese are not
found in books about pedigreed cats and are rarely featured in magazine
articles or other media. By becoming a
member of PREOSSIA you can work with others to increase public
awareness of
the breed. By showing the large cat associations that there is public
support
for the Old-Style Siamese, you can convince them to recognize these
cats
and allow them to be shown again using their own breed standard. Public
support
will also convince book authors and publishers to devote books and
articles
to the Old-Style Siamese.
For questions about PREOSSIA, email PREOSSIA Membership
or the Marketing Chair.
For questions about this site, email the Webmaster.
(c) Text and photos copyright 1999-2007 A.D. by PREOSSIA. Some photos
and materials on or linked to this site are copyrighted by individual
PREOSSIA members and their friends and are found here with their
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