Sumxu

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Sumxu (松鼠, song shu) chasing a green-haired turtle (绿毛龟, Lü mao gui), in Michael Boym's Flora Sinensis

The sumxu, Chinese lop-eared cat, drop-eared cat, droop-eared cat, or hanging-ear cat, all names referring to its characteristic feature of pendulous ears, was a possibly mythical, long-haired, lop-eared type of cat or cat-like creature, now considered extinct, if it ever actually existed. The descriptions are based on reports from travellers, on a live specimen reportedly taken to Hamburg by a sailor, and on a taxidermy specimen exhibited in Germany. The cats were supposedly valued as pets, but was also described as a food animal. The last reported Chinese lop-eared cat was in 1938. It is believed by some to have been a mutation similar to that found in the Scottish Fold.

Historical studies on early modern Chinese sources demonstrated that the name sumxu (松鼠, song shu) as understood by Michał Boym (c. 1612–1659) in his Flora Sinensis (1656) originally referred to the Siberian weasel (despite the fact that it is now used to name animals from the Sciuridae family),[1] but a series of mistranslations might have caused the name to be applied to the alleged cat or cat-like animal.

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