As far as I know, it is very rare.
A fertile male calico or tortoiseshell is very rare. Tortoiseshells are identified by the presence of orange in their fur. Calicos are the same, but have a large amount of white which makes the fur patched rather than mottled. If your calico male has mated with a female, it does not necessarily mean he is fertile. If the female becomes pregnant and there is absolutely no way of her having mated with a cat besides your male calico, then he must be fertile. Bear in mind that breeding a calico male does not increase the chances of getting male calico kittens.
Yes, they are real. Just rare and unlikely.
There is no official data as to the percentage of black cats in the world. There are millions of black cats in every country.
There is no such thing as a male calico cat unless it has a birth mark some where that makes its skin one different color somewhere on a two toned cat then it would be a two toned cat with a birth mark that makes it look calico. All three colored cats are females. No ands ors or buts about it. Dear Prof Rowan, You are incorrect, while male calico's are rare they do occur. The color gene for calico's occur on the X gene, XXY males exist and can be calico. I have seen male calico's, not bicolored male cats with a "birthmark" but tricolored multi patched true calico's. yeah so where you sell um you didnt help at all
Oh my, cats are very fertile. So yes, a female cat can get pregnant from just one time.
do you not think that this is pretty sick and no this is actually imposable for the egg to get fertile from a dogs sperm, the dog can actually mate with the cat but it may hurt the poor little kitty cat
There is no such thing as a male calico cat and a male cats behind would be sticking out and a girls behind wouldn't have anything sticking out. --- Calico males are extremely rare, so it is safe to assume your calicoes are all female.
A male cat is called a Tom cat.
A male cat is usually referred to as a "Tom".
"Tom cat" is a term used for a male cat, usually the dominant male in a group. It is also used to refer to any stray or feral male cat.
A male cat is traditionally called a "tom cat".
Nether one is actually rare.