A breed of
dog. Rat terriers are generally small but very
muscular, with coloration mostly in black, white, and tan. They usually come in three sizes: the standard is about 14-23 inches tall and 12-35 pounds; the mid-sized
terrier is 8-14 inches and 6-8 pounds; and the toy is about eight inches tall and 4-6 pounds. Their tails are often
docked at birth.
The rat terrier was probably developed in
Great Britain in the 1820s and brought to the
United States in the late 19th century. It gets its name from its skill at catching and killing
rats and other
vermin, which made it a popular
farm dog in the early years of the 20th century. It was also an excellent
hunter of small rodents like
rabbits and
squirrels. It was probably developed from crosses between
English white terriers,
Manchester terriers,
smooth fox terriers, and
whippets, with later genetic additions from
beagles,
Italian greyhounds,
miniature pinschers, and
chihuahuas. They are considered very similar to small mixed-breed hunting dogs called
feists. The breed has benefitted from a lot less of the
inbreeding that most other breeds go through, so they're generally healthier and smarter than many purebred dogs, but they are a bit
neurotic and
excitable.
Rat terriers make great
pets -- they're
smart,
active, and very
loving. They're pretty
territorial, so they make good
watchdogs, but once they're properly introduced to strangers, they will usually accept them. They are extremely
energetic, so they need a lot of
exercise -- you should try to give them at least a half-hour's worth of exercise a day. They like to
dig, though, so you'll have to take precautions to make sure they don't dig under your fence. They love to play and are considered fairly easy to train. Their life expectancy is 15-18 years.
Nipper,
RCA's trademark dog listening to the old-timey
phonograph, was probably a rat terrier, and
Theodore Roosevelt almost certainly owned some and helped popularize the breed name. The breed is not currently recognized by the
American Kennel Club as a purebred dog -- their genetic diversity works against them in that respect -- but the breed's
popularity makes it likely that they will eventually be recognized by the AKC.
My brother's dog,
Hyla, is a rat terrier, and I love her dearly. I am her indulgent uncle who lets her misbehave, so she takes my visits as her excuses to bark loudly and jump in the air until I sit on the couch so she can crawl in my lap and step on my crotch. When she finally calms down, we love to sit together and contemplate how
awesome we both are. She loves a nicely carpeted house because
carpets give her the traction she needs to race around at ungodly speeds. Hyla has a colossal
appetite, and before my brother learned to keep food off the kitchen countertops (she has little trouble jumping up there if there's something there she really wants), she managed to eat everything from a box of
prunes to most of a loaf of
French bread to an entire
apple, core and all. Luckily, her hyperspeed metabolism keeps her trim. She is impossibly cute, and I love her so.
Research:
http://www.dogbreedinfo.com/ratterrier.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat_Terrier