Rastreador Brasileiro Explained

Rastreador Brasileiro
Brazilian Tracker
Also Known As:Urrador
Urrador Americano
Country:Brazil
Coat:short, smooth
Colour:blue roan/speckled,
black & tan,
white and brown,
white and black,
tricolour
Kc Name:CBKC
Kc Std:https://cbkc.org/application/views/docs/padroes/padrao-raca_224.pdf
Fcistd:http://www.fci.be/Nomenclature/Standards/275g06-en.pdf

The Rastreador Brasileiro (English: Brazilian Tracker) is a mid- to large-sized breed of dog—specifically a scent hound—from Brazil, also known by the names Urrador (for its signature baying and howl when hunting) or Urrador Americano, a reference to the North American (U.S.) coonhound in the breed's bloodlines and genealogy. First recognised by the Fédération Cynologique Internationale (FCI) in 1967, by 1973, an outbreak of disease and an overdose of insecticides, effectively eliminated the breed's entire population; both the FCI and the Confederação Brasileira de Cinofilia (CBC), Brazil's kennel club organization, declared the breed extinct that year and de-listed it.[1] However, efforts were made to reproduce the Rastreador Brasileiro through mixing and controlled breeding projects involving several other hound breeds, resulting in today's Rastreador Brasileiro. In 2013, the Brazilian Kennel Club (CBKC) officially re-recognized the breed.[2] An updated FCI breed standard was produced in 2019.

Appearance

The Rastreador Brasileiro has a short, smooth coat. The colour options are:[2]

The breed standard from 1970 shows the size as being 62 to 67 cm (24.4 to 26.4 ins) at the withers, and the general appearance as being generally similar to an American coonhound.[3] However, the current official Brazilian breed standard mentions the height of males being 60 to 65 cm and the height of females being 56 to 63 cm.[2]

Re-creation

The Grupo de Apoio ao Resgate do Rastreador Brasileiro in Brazil, a club dedicated to the Brazilian restoration of the breed, lists as an objective the finding of 40 breeding animals of the correct type that can be certified as members of the breed, so as to eventually be once again recognised by the Brazilian Kennel Club.[4]

Restoration of the breed is difficult due to the existence of very few dogs of the correct type and the lack of people interested in recovering the true Brazilian cultural and genetic heritage of the breed.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://rastreador.urrador.vilabol.uol.com.br/historico.htm History of the breed (in Portuguese)
  2. https://cbkc.org/application/views/docs/padroes/padrao-raca_224.pdf Padrão Oficial da Raça: Rastreador Brasileiro
  3. http://rastreador.urrador.vilabol.uol.com.br/padrao.htm Breed Standard (Padrão)
  4. http://rastreador.urrador.vilabol.uol.com.br Objectives
  5. Dogs & Cia Magazine, No 235 - December 1998 / No 267 - August 2001 / No 293 - October 2003 quoted online here