Current:Home > InvestMeet the newest breed to join the American Kennel Club, a little dog with a big smile -GlobalTrade
Meet the newest breed to join the American Kennel Club, a little dog with a big smile
View
Date:2025-04-19 03:49:24
NEW YORK (AP) — It’s small in stature, big on activity and known for a “smile,” and it’s ready to compete with 200 other dog breeds.
Say hello to the Lancashire heeler, the latest breed recognized by the American Kennel Club. The organization announced Wednesday that the rare herding breed is now eligible for thousands of U.S. dog shows, including the prominent Westminster Kennel Club show.
With long bodies and short coats that are often black an tan, the solidly built dogs are shaped a bit like a downsized corgi, standing around 1 foot (30 centimeters) at the shoulder and weighing up to about 17 pounds (7.7 kilograms). Historically, they were farm helpers that could both drive cattle and rout rats, and today they participate in an array of canine sports and pursuits.
“They’re gritty little dogs, and they’re very intelligent little dogs,” says Patricia Blankenship of Flora, Mississippi, who has bred them for over a decade. “It’s an enjoyable little breed to be around.”
Their official description — or breed standard, in dog-world parlance — calls for them to be “courageous, happy, affectionate to owner,” and owners say contented heelers sometimes pull back their lips in a “smile.”
They’re “extremely versatile,” participating in everything from scent work to dock diving contests, says United States Lancashire Heeler Club President Sheryl Bradbury. But she advises that a Lancashire heeler “has to have a job,” whether it’s an organized dog sport or simply walks and fetch with its owners.
The dogs benefit from meeting various different people and canines, added Bradbury, who breeds them in Plattsmouth, Nebraska.
Lancashire heelers go back centuries in the United Kingdom, where they’re now deemed a “vulnerable native breed” at risk of dying out in their homeland. Britain’s Kennel Club has added an average of just 121 Lancashire heelers annually to its registry in recent years, and the American Kennel Club says only about 5,000 exist worldwide.
Founded in 1884, the AKC is the United States’ oldest purebred dog registry and functions like a league for many canine competitions, including sports open to mixed-breeds and purebreds. But only the 201 recognized breeds vie for the traditional “best in show” trophies at Westminster and elsewhere.
To get recognized, a breed must count at least 300 pedigreed dogs, distributed through at least 20 states, and fanciers must agree on a breed standard. Recognition is voluntary, and some breeds’ aficionados approach other kennel clubs or none at all.
Adding breeds, or even perpetuating them, bothers animal rights activists. They argue that dog breeding powers puppy mills, reduces pet adoptions and accentuates canine health problems by compressing genetic diversity.
The AKC says it promotes responsibly “breeding for type and function” to produce dogs with special skills, such as tracking lost people, as well as pets with characteristics that owners can somewhat predict and prepare for. The club has given over $32 million since 1995 to a foundation that underwrites canine health research.
veryGood! (57)
Related
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- A teen’s murder, mold in the walls: Unfulfilled promises haunt public housing
- Viral video captures bottlenose dolphins rocketing high through the air: Watch
- What polling shows about Americans’ views of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Soldier in mother’s custody after being accused of lying about ties to insurrectionist group
- Scientists closely watching these 3 disastrous climate change scenarios
- 'It's going to be different': Raheem Morris carries lessons into fresh chance with Falcons
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Appeals panel upholds NASCAR penalty to Austin Dillon after crash-filled win
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- What’s for breakfast? At Chicago hotel hosting DNC event, there may have been mealworms
- Zoë Kravitz is 'much closer' to Channing Tatum after directing 'Blink Twice'
- What to know about Labor Day and its history
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Tech Tycoon Mike Lynch Confirmed Dead After Body Recovered From Sunken Yacht
- Sword, bullhorn stolen from Hall of Fame basketball coach Rick Pitino’s St. John’s University office
- College football Week 0 kicks off and we're also talking College Football Playoff this week
Recommendation
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
King Charles III Shares Rare Personal Update Amid Cancer Diagnosis
Ex-politician tells a Nevada jury he didn’t kill a Las Vegas investigative reporter
Hungary says it will provide free tickets to Brussels for migrants trying to enter the EU
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Body of British tech magnate Mike Lynch is recovered from wreckage of superyacht, coast guard says
Family of Gov. Jim Justice, candidate for US Senate, reaches agreement to avoid hotel foreclosure
Michigan girl, 14, and 17-year-old boyfriend charged as adults in plot to kill her mother