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  2. Šarplaninac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Šarplaninac

    The Šarplaninac is on the list of banned dog breeds in Denmark. [11] The Danish list includes 13 breeds and it is considered controversial, having received criticism from dog owners and several political parties because eight of the 13 breeds have no reports of any incident. Among the eight is Šarplaninac. [12]

  3. Karakachan dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karakachan_dog

    The dog is named after the Karakachans, Greek nomadic shepherds. Due to their conservative stock-breeding traditions, they have preserved some of the oldest breeds of domestic animals in Europe: the Karakachan sheep, Karakachan horse and the Karakachan dog. This dog was used as a livestock guardian prized for its intelligence and fearless nature.

  4. Czechoslovakian Wolfdog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czechoslovakian_Wolfdog

    A lecture by Hartl, "Results of crossing wolves with dogs", brought major attention at the World Dog Show held in June 1965 in Brno and in Prague at the annual meeting of the Fédération Cynologique Internationale (FCI) and the International Cynologic Congress. In the following year, Ing. Hartl compiled a draft standard of a new dog breed.

  5. Wikipedia : WikiProject Dogs/Dog breeds task force/Breed ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Dogs/...

    User:Sannse did a tremendous amount of research into what breed name was used by each major kennel club, what group the breeds belonged to, what the various alternative names were, and, in the leftmost column, the names that were the most common among the English-language breed clubs and/or on English web pages.

  6. Tornjak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tornjak

    The Tornjak (pronounced), also known as the Bosnian-Herzegovinian sheepdog, is a recreated breed of livestock guardian dog native to Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia. [1] They are molosser-type mountain dogs, [1] similar to other livestock guardian breeds of the region, the Šarplaninac, Bucovina Shepherd Dog, and the Greek Shepherd.

  7. List of Slovenian domestic animal breeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Slovenian_domestic...

    Slovenian autochthonous breeds are Styrian Hen, [5] Bosnian Mountain Horse, [7] Lipizzan, Posavac, Slovenian Cold-blood, Cika cattle, Krškopolje pig, Bela Krajina Pramenka, Bovec sheep, Jezersko-Solčava sheep, [5] Improved Jezersko-Solčava sheep, [8] Istrian milk, Drežnica goat, Karst Shepherd dog and Carniolan honey bee (some also include ...

  8. Karst Shepherd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karst_Shepherd

    The Karst Shepherd Dog is a medium-sized dog with a long 'iron grey' coat. [3] The Karst Shepherd Dog's skull is slightly longer than its muzzle; the breed standard calls for a length of 13–14 cm (5.1–5.5 in) for the skull and a length of 11–12 cm (4.3–4.7 in) for the muzzle. The nose, eyelids, and lips are black in colour.

  9. Small Međimurje Dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Međimurje_Dog

    The Small Međimurje Dog, also known as Međi, or locally well known as Štakoraš (The Ratter) is a breed of dog native to Croatia. It has been bred for over a hundred years in northwestern Croatia, in Međimurje area mostly. Found in rural yards as a guard dog and hunter for harmful rodents.