Dogs A
purebred dog is a dog of a
modern breed of dog, with written documentation showing the individual purebred dog's descent from its breeds'
foundation stock. In dogs, the term breed is used two ways: loosely, to refer to
dog types or
landraces of dog (also called natural breeds or ancient breeds); or more precisely, to refer to modern breeds of dog, which are documented so as to be known to be descended from specific ancestors, that closely resemble others of their breed in appearance, movement, way of working and other characters; and that reproduce with offspring closely resembling each other and their parents. Purebred dogs are breeds in the second sense. New breeds of dog are constantly being created, and there are many websites for new breed associations and breed clubs offering legitimate registrations for new or rare breeds. When dogs of a new breed are "visibly similar in most characteristics" and have reliable documented descent from a "known and designated foundation stock", Other commonly used terms are random-bred cat, domestic cat, house(hold) cat or moggie/moggy (UK English). Out of the hundreds of millions of cats worldwide, almost none have any purebred ancestors, nor belong to a specific breed, because purebred cats are a human invention of the last 150 years and selectively bred from
foundation stock by breeders in closed-off lineages. According to the government of the United States, fewer than 2% of cats in that country are purebred and raised by breeders. Not all breeders sell registered pedigree cats. The
list of cat breeds is quite large: most
cat registries actually recognize between 30 and 75 breeds of cats, and several more are in development, with one or more new breeds being recognized each year on average, having distinct features (
phenotype) and
lineage. Nowadays, there exist over 100
cat breeds and varieties recognized by at least one of the official
cat registries.
Owners and breeders compete in
cat shows to see whose animal bears the closest resemblance (best
conformance) to an idealized definition, based on
breed type and the
breed standard for each breed. Modern breeders created cat breeds, which are actually feline
hybrids between a
wild cat species and the domestic cat species (
Felis catus ). A famous example of such a hybrid cat breed is the
Savannah cat (
Felis catus ×
Leptailurus serval ), which is produced by crossing wild
servals with domestic cats. All domestic (non-hybrid) cats and cat breeds fall under the domestic cat (
Felis catus), and are no longer considered separate (sub)species. The domestication of the
Felis silvestris lybica started around 9.000 years ago in the
Near East and
Egypt region, Written and oral histories of various animals or pedigrees of certain types of horse have been kept throughout history, though
breed registry stud books trace back to about the 13th century, at least in
Europe, when pedigrees were tracked in writing, and the practice of declaring a type of horse to be a breed or a purebred became more widespread. Certain
horse breeds, such as the
Andalusian horse and the
Arabian horse, are claimed by aficionados of the respective breeds to be ancient, near-pure descendants from an ancient wild prototype, though mapping of the horse genome as well as the
mtDNA and
y-DNA of various breeds has largely disproved such claims.
Livestock Most domesticated
farm animals among others can also have true-breeding breeds and
breed registries, particularly
cattle,
water buffaloes,
sheep,
goats,
donkeys,
guinea pigs,
chickens,
fancy pigeons,
domestic ducks,
rabbits, and
pigs. While animals bred strictly for market sale are not always purebreds, or if purebred may not be registered, most livestock producers value the presence of purebred genetic stock for the consistency of traits such animals provide. It is common for a farm's male breeding stock in particular to be of purebred, pedigreed lines. In cattle, some breeders associations make a difference between "purebred" and "full blood". Full blood cattle are fully pedigreed animals, where every ancestor is registered in the herdbook and shows the typical characteristics of the breed. Purebred are those animals that have been bred-up to purebred status as a result of using full blood animals to cross with an animal of another breed. Artificial breeding via
artificial insemination or
embryo transfer is often used in sheep and cattle breeding to quickly expand, or improve purebred herds. Embryo transfer techniques allow top quality female
livestock to have a greater influence on the genetic advancement of a herd or flock in much the same way that artificial insemination has allowed greater use of superior sires. ==Notes==