The society published a draft breed standard for the Lobito Herreño in 2013.[1] The breed society is the Asociación para la Recuperación del Perro Lobo Herreño.[2]
History
It is not clear whether or to what extent the modern dogs of the Canary Islands derive from dogs already present in the islands before the arrival of the Castilian conquistadores at the start of the fifteenth century.[4] The origins of the Lobito Herreño are unknown; it is suggested that it derives from dogs brought to the archipelago in or after the eighteenth century.[1][5]: 433 In 2013 the Real Sociedad Canina de España included it on its list of grupos étnicos caninos,[6] which the society defines as a regional dog population with consistent form and function evolved through functional selection;[3] in the same year it published a draft breed standard.[1]
In 2021 the Parliament of the Canary Islands passed a resolution declaring the principal indigenous animal breeds of the islands to be a "cultural, genetic and ethnographic heritage". The text of the resolution included the four internationally-recognised dog breeds of the islands – the Pastor Garafiano, the Perro Majorero, the Presa Canario and the Podenco Canario – but not the Lobito Herreño, although this had been discussed in Parliament.[7][8][9]
The Lobito is not the only breed for which recognition is being sought in the Canaries; others are the Podenco Enano, also of El Hierro, and the Ratonero Palmero of La Palma.[4]
Characteristics
The Lobito Herreño is of wolf-like and primitive appearance. It is of medium size, with a height at the withers of some 52–54 cm and weight in the range 18–22 kg according to the draft breed standard.[1] A study in 2009 of fifty-five animals on El Hierro found average heights and weights of 52.6 cm/21.1 kg for bitches and 54.7 cm/21.9 kg for dogs.[10]: 12 The coat is usually grey but may also be reddish, both colours with pale masking round the mouth and eyes; solid white or cream is also permitted, these colours without masking. The tip of the tail is black.[1]
Use
Like other pastoral dogs, it was traditionally used to assist the shepherd with the movement and management of the flock, and was suspicious of strangers but faithful to its master.[1] With the disappearance of the pastoral way of life, it is increasingly kept as a companion dog.[10]: 14
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lobo Herreño.
^ abAntonio Morales De La Nuez, Leticia Hernández Martínez, Noemí Castro Navarro, Juan Francisco Capote Álvarez, Anastasio Argüello Henríquez (2009). Estudio morfométrico del Lobo Herreño (in Spanish). Pequeños Rumiantes. 10 (3): 12–14. Seville: Sociedad Española
de Ovinotecnia y Caprinotecnia. ISSN1888-4865.