Norwegian Forest Cat

[1] This landrace breed is adapted to a very cold climate, with a top coat of long, glossy hair and a woolly undercoat for insulation.

These cats could have reproduced with farm and feral stock and may have eventually evolved into the modern-day Norwegian Forest breed.

[4][5][6] The Siberian and the Turkish Angora, longhaired cats from Russia and Turkey, respectively, are also possible ancestors of the breed.

[12] In 1938 the first organization devoted to the breed, the Norwegian Forest Cat Club, was formed in Oslo, Norway.

The coat consists of a long, thick, glossy, water-repellent top layer and a woolly undercoat and is thickest at the legs, chest, and head.

[10] Their water-resistant coat with a dense undercoat developed to help the cat survive in the harsh Scandinavian climate.

[citation needed] Norwegian Forest Cats that live primarily outdoors become swift and effective hunters, but the breed can also adapt to indoor life.

[26] In an experiment directed by John C. Fyfea, Rebeccah L. Kurzhals, and others, it was concluded that a complex rearrangement in the breed's Glycogen branching enzyme (GBE1) can cause both a perinatal hypoglycemic collapse and a late-juvenile-onset neuromuscular degeneration in glycogen storage disease type IV in the breed.

[4] Glycogen storage disease type IV due to branching enzyme deficiency was found in an inbred family of Norwegian Forest Cats.

[31] An analysis of pedigree records of cats in England found evidence of hereditary cardiomyopathy.

Amber tabby and white adult female in snow
Blue tabby female kitten
Black blotched tabby and white adult in a tree