Cats: The many newly developed and recognized
breeds of domestic cat are crossbreeds between existing, well-established breeds (sometimes with limited
hybridization with some wild species), to either combine selected traits from the
foundation stock, or propagate a rare
mutation without excessive
inbreeding. However, some nascent breeds such as the
Aegean cat are developed entirely from a local
landrace population. Most
experimental cat breeds are crossbreeds.
Cattle: In cattle, there are systems of crossbreeding. In many crossbreeds, one animal is larger than the other. One is used when the purebred females are particularly adapted to a specific environment, and are crossed with purebred bulls from another environment to produce a generation having traits of both parents.
Sheep: The large number of breeds of sheep, which vary greatly, creates an opportunity for crossbreeding to be used to tailor production of lambs to the goal of the individual stockman.
Llamas: Results of crossbreeding classic and woolly breeds of llama are unpredictable. The resulting offspring displays physical characteristics of either parent, or a mix of characteristics from both, periodically producing a fleeced llama. The results are increasingly unpredictable when both parents are crossbreeds, with possibility of the offspring displaying characteristics of a grandparent, not obvious in either parent.
Dogs: A
crossbred dog is a cross between two (sometimes more) known breeds, and is usually distinguished from a
mixed-breed dog, which has ancestry from many sources, some of which may not be known. Crossbreeds are popular, due to the belief that they have
increased vigor without loss of attractiveness of the dog. Certain planned crossbreeding between purebred dogs of different breeds are now widely known as "designer dogs" and can produce puppies worth more than their purebred parents, due to a high demand. was developed from crossbreeding programs in the 1970s and 1980s that blended
Arabian horse and
American Saddlebred bloodlines
Horses: Crossbreeding horses is often done with the intent of ultimately creating a new breed of horse. One type of modern crossbreeding in horses created many of the
warmblood breeds used in the
sport horse disciplines, usually registered in an
open stud book by a
studbook selection procedure that evaluates conformation, pedigree and, in some animals, a training or performance standard. Most warmblood breeds began as a cross of
draft horse breeds on
Thoroughbreds, but have, in some cases, developed over the past century to the point where they are considered to be a true-breeding population and have a
closed stud book. Other types of recognized crossbreeding include that within the
American Quarter Horse, which will register horses with one Thoroughbred parent and one registered Quarter Horse parent in the "Appendix" registry, and allow such animals full breed registration status as Quarter Horses if they meet a certain performance standard. Another well-known crossbred horse is the
Anglo-Arabian, which may be produced by a purebred
Arabian horse crossed on a Thoroughbred, or by various crosses of Anglo-Arabians with other Anglo-Arabians, as long as the ensuing animal never has more than 75% or less than 25% of each breed represented in its pedigree. == Hybrid animals ==