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Urban myths about fearsome felines nothing more than just a trick of the tail

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Jade Lee-Duffy

If you have been living in Asia for a while, you've probably noticed a number of cats with short cut-off tails or longer ones with a kink.

An urban myth is that cats are so beautiful Chinese parents don't want the animal's beauty to detract from that of their own children, so they cut off the tail to lessen a feline's attractiveness.

Another myth in Japan is that cats turn into monsters called bakeneko and one way to prevent this transformation is for people cut off the tail.

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British television cat expert and chairman of the British Naturalist Association Roger Tabor debunks this theory, explaining Asia's kinky-tailed cats started from a genetic mutation.

'The population is so high of kinky-tailed cats, could you imagine how many demented people you would need to cut off all these tails?' he says.

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Possibly the Manx cat, known for its naturally short tail, was crossed with another to produce a range of full-length tails with 22 vertebrae, shorter tails or no tails at all.

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