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The Finnish Lapphund club of Great Britain adopted an ethical policy in 2006 that matings will only be allowed if the progeny can not be affected by GPRA. In 2001, 2.5% dogs of Finnish dogs were affected by PRA. [5] [page needed] Some Lapphunds are affected by cataracts, with 3.4% of Finnish dogs affected. Cataracts can be caused by a number of ...
In 1967, the Finnish Kennel Club (the Suomen Kennelliitto) decided to split the Lapponian Shepherd breed into two separate breeds called the Finnish Lapphund and the Lapponian Herder. [2] They did not take Cockhill's Finnish Lapphound into account [ 2 ] and in the beginning of the 1980s, it finally vanished due to the popularity of the Finnish ...
Around the same time, the two kennel clubs merged, and all the Finnish reindeer dogs were placed in the same registry. In 1966, they were separated again, based on coat length. [2] One breed was renamed Lapphund at that time, and the other was named Lapinporokoira (translated into English as the Lapponian Herder.) [3]
Daisy’s breed mix came back as 83.8% German shepherd and 16.2% Labrador retriever. The German shepherd result, however, was further broken down into three distinct shepherd types: German ...
The McNab Dog, also called the McNab Shepherd or McNab Collie is a herding dog that originated in Hopland, Mendocino County, Northern California.The McNab was bred to withstand the tough conditions found in California such as heat, burrs, foxtails, and rugged terrain.
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It has mainly been used as a deer-hunting dog [1] and its most remarkable ancestors are the Finnish Spitz and the Ostyak Laika. [3] The Swedish Kennel Club, Svenska Kennelklubben , recognized the breed in 2000 [ 2 ] and nowadays it is also recognized in several other Nordic countries, such as Finland and Norway .
The Russian word laika (лайка) is a noun derived from the verb layat' (лаять, to bark), and literally means barker.As the name of a dog variety, it is used not only in Russian cynological literature, but sometimes in other languages as well to refer to all varieties of hunting dogs traditionally kept by the peoples of the northern Russia and adjacent areas.