Jeju dog

Jeju Dog
OriginSouth Korea
Dog (domestic dog)
Jeju dog
Hangul
제주개
Hanja
濟州犬
Revised RomanizationJeju gae
McCune–ReischauerCheju kae

The Jeju Dog (Korean제주개) is a breed of dog that was brought back from the edge of extinction in 1986, when only three of them were found on the entire island of Jeju in South Korea. Since then, an aggressive campaign of breeding has yielded a current population of close to 300. However, the 'pure bred' Jeju Dog population is only estimated to be at about 69 as of September 2010.

In 2010, Korea designated the Jeju Dog as a national heritage animal, which will allow for subsequent national protection. Before this, not enough animals remained to allow for such a distinction.

Protection initiatives include a 2017 auction held by the Jeju Livestock Institute for those interested in adopting one of the 20 puppies. According to the institute, the goal was to continue to breed and preserve the Jeju Dog after being criticized for selling the puppies.[1]

  1. ^ "Bidders on Jeju Island Flock to Adopt 'Jeju Dogs' | Be Korea-savvy". koreabizwire.com. 12 July 2017. Retrieved 2018-08-06.

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