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The Rat Terrier ranges from about 10 to 25 pounds (4.5 to 11.3 kg) and stands 10 to 18 inches (25 to 46 cm) at the shoulder. The miniature size—13 inches (33 cm) and under as defined by the UKC—has become more popular as a house pet and companion dog, but the miniature is still a hunting dog.
Rat Terrier: a Comprehensive Owner's Guide (Special Limited Edition). Kennel Club Books ISBN 1-59378-367-1. Rat Terrier Club of America. "What is Their Temperament Like?". Retrieved August 30, 2007. Orthopedic Foundation for Animals Teddy Roosevelt Terrier Primary Lens Luxation Test Results [permanent dead link ]. Retrieved September 12, 2012.
Rat Terrier; Russian Toy; Silky Terrier; Toy Fox Terrier; Toy Manchester Terrier; Yorkshire Terrier This page was last edited on 31 October 2024, at 14:28 ...
Rafeiro do Alentejo [242] Rajapalayam [243] Rampur Greyhound [30] Rastreador Brasileiro; Rat Terrier [77] Ratonero Murciano; Redbone Coonhound [244] Rhodesian Ridgeback [170] Rize Koyun; Romanian Mioritic Shepherd Dog [92] Romanian Raven Shepherd Dog [92] Rottweiler [164] Rough Collie [65] Russian Spaniel; Russkiy Toy [212] [245] Russo-European ...
Fox Terriers and feists are often predominantly white so as to be visible to hunters. Many other variants of this type exist, such as the Russell Terrier, Parson Russell Terrier and Rat Terrier, with many locally developed purebred dog breeds. The original fox terrier type was documented in England in the 18th century.
The English Toy Terrier (ETT) (Black & Tan) developed from the Old English Black and Tan Terrier and is closely related to the larger Manchester Terrier.Fast and agile, its origins are in the world of the rat pit, a sport popular in the cities of Victorian England where terriers were placed in a circle or pit with a number of rats and bets were taken as to which dog would kill its quota of ...
A terrier is a dog of any one of many breeds or landraces of the terrier type, which are typically small, wiry, game, and fearless. [25] A feist is a small hunting dog crossed with a terrier, developed in the rural South by breeders for hunting small game and eliminating vermin. [26] Terrier and feists commonly used as ratters include: Airedale ...
Some Toy Fox Terrier owners can trace their dogs’ pedigrees to "Foiler", the first Fox Terrier registered by the Kennel Club in Britain, circa 1875–6. Other related breeds include the Jack Russell Terrier, the Rat Terrier, and the Tenterfield Terrier.