Natural bobtail
A natural bobtail is an animal's tail which due to a mutated gene grows unusually short or is missing completely. The genes for the shortened tail may be dominant or recessive.
Because of legislation restricting or preventing docking, natural bobtails are growing in popularity among the dog fancy for some traditionally docked breeds. For example, one Boxer breeder and geneticist in England has successfully petitioned the Kennel Club for permission to cross Corgis into his lines and then backcross to Boxers, introducing the gene into his lines. This would have been unheard of in decades past. A number of these bobtail Boxers have been exported to various countries around the world.
However in some breeds, such as the Rottweiler, natural bobtails are not universally accepted in the Country of Origin Breed Standard.
Animals with a natural bobtail
Cats
More than one gene is responsible for tail suppression in cats; research is incomplete, but it is known that the Japanese Bobtail and related breeds have a different mutation from that found in the Manx and its derivatives.- American Bobtail
- Japanese Bobtailtails are short and kinked, but not entirely absent
- Karelian Bobtailtails are short and kinked, but not entirely absent
- Korean Bobtailtails are short and kinked, but not entirely absent
- Kurilian Bobtail
- Manx, and Cymric or Manx Longhair; tails range from full to entirely absent
- Mekong Bobtail, a variant of the Siamese
- Pixie-bob
- Alpine Lynx cat
- American Lynx cat
- Desert Lynx cat
- Highlander cat
- Owyhee Bob
Dogs
Although the following dogs may present a natural bobtail, the C189G mutation often appeared after decades or centuries of docking, which is considered in many countries, unnecessary, painful, cruel or mutilation. Today, many countries ban cropping and docking. In countries where docking is banned, natural bobtail dogs must present a certificate to show that their tail is a result of the C189G mutation in order to be shown.
Breeds that can present C189G mutation:
- Australian Shepherd
- Austrian Pinscher
- Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog
- Braque du Bourbonnais
- Braque Francais
- Brazilian Terrier
- Brittany
- Croatian Sheepdog
- Danish–Swedish Farmdog
- Dobermann
- Donggyeongi
- English Shepherd
- Jack Russell Terrier
- Karelian Bear Dog
- Labrador Retriever
- Mountain Cur
- Mudi
- Pembroke Welsh Corgi
- Polish Lowland Sheepdog
- Pyrenean Shepherd
- Rottweiler
- Schipperke
- Spanish Water Dog
- Swedish Vallhund
- Boston Terrier
- English Bulldog
- King Charles Spaniel
- Miniature Schnauzer
- Parson Russel Terrier
- Boxer
- Armant
- Entlebucher Mountain Dog
- French Bulldog
- Hmong bobtail dog
- McNab
- Miniature Fox Terrier
- Old English Sheepdog
- Rat Terrier
- Tenterfield Terrier