List of Scottish breeds


This is a list of domestic animal breeds originating in Scotland. To be considered domesticated, a population of animals must have their behaviour, life cycle, or physiology systemically altered as a result of being under human control for many generations.[1]

Scotland has produced some of the longest-established domestic animal breeds.[citation needed] There are thirty-seven extant animal breeds from Scotland, and three that are extinct. The Soay Sheep has prehistoric origins,[citation needed] and the Galloway breed of beef cattle dates back several hundred years. New breeds have also been developed more recently in Scotland, such as the Scottish Fold cat, which dates from 1961.[2]

The North Ronaldsay Sheep is a most unusual breed, subsisting largely on a diet of seaweed.[3] The Boreray was in 2012 the only sheep breed listed by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust as 'critical', its highest level of concern at that time;[4] in 2022 it was listed as 'at risk', the lower of the two levels of concern of the Trust.[5] Some breeds, such as the Shetland Pony and the Border Collie are well known throughout much of the Western world, whilst others such as the Scots Dumpy chicken are little-known, even at home.[citation needed] Fifteen breeds of dog have Scottish origins, including six terrier breeds.[6] Indeed, the relative isolation of many Scottish islands has led to a preponderance of breeds from these places being represented. Various breeds are now extinct, including the Grice, an archaic and somewhat aggressive pig.[7]

Breeds

Cats

BreedImagePlace and date of originStatus
Scottish Fold Coupar Angus, 1961rare[2]

Cattle

BreedImagePlace and date of originStatus
Aberdeen Angus Aberdeenshire, Angus, 18th centurynot at risk[8]
Ayrshire Ayrshire, before 1800not at risk[9][10]
Belted Galloway Galloway, 17–18th centuryrare[11]
Galloway Galloway, 700–1100not at risk[12]
Highland West Highlands, before 1800not at risk[13]
Luing Luing, after 1947not at risk[14]
Shetland Shetland, 700–1100at risk[15]

Chickens

BreedImagePlace and date of originStatus
Scots DumpyHighlands, 11th centurypriority;[16] rare[17]

Scots Grey

Lanarkshire, 16th centurypriority;[16] rare[18]

Dogs

BreedImagePlace and date of originStatus
Bearded Collie Highlands, 16th centuryvulnerable native breed[19]

Border Collie

Scottish Borders, late 19th centurynot at risk[20]
Border Terrier Scottish Borders, 1700snot at risk[21]
Cairn Terrier Scottish highlands, 16th–19th centurynot at risk[22]
Dandie Dinmont Skye and Scottish Borders, mid-18th century or earliervulnerable native breed[22][23]
Golden Retriever Glen Affric, 1865not at risk[24]
Gordon Setter Moray, 1700svulnerable native breed[25]
Rough Collie Scottish Highlands, 19th centurynot at risk[26]
Smooth Collie Scotland, 19th centuryvulnerable native breed
Scottish Terrier Aberdeen, 15th–16th centuryat risk[22][27]
Scottish DeerhoundProbably the Highlands, possibly in the Middle Agesvulnerable native breed
Shetland Sheepdog
or Sheltie
1900snot at risk[28]
Skye Terrier Skye, before 1588vulnerable native breed[22][29][30]
West Highland White Terrier
or Westie
Skye & Argyll, 16th centurynot at risk[22]

Geese

BreedImagePlace and date of originStatus
ShetlandShetland, unknownUK and US - priority;[16] critical[31]

Horses

BreedImagePlace and date of originStatus
Clydesdale Clydesdale, 1750sat risk[32]
Eriskay Pony Hebridescritical[33][34]
Highland Pony Highlands and Islands, 16th centuryat risk[35][36][37]
Shetland Pony Shetland, B.C.not at risk[38][39]

Sheep

BreedImagePlace and date of originStatus

Boreray

St Kilda, Scotland, 1930scritical[40]

Castlemilk Moorit

Dumfriesshire, from more ancient Scottish and other breeds including Soay and Shetland, 1900scritical[41][42]

Cheviot

Scottish Borders, 14th century or earliernot at risk[43]

Hebridean

Cumbria, probably from sheep from the Hebrides, 19th centuryrare[44]

North Country Cheviot

Cheviot Hills, Caithness, Sutherland, 18th centuryUK and North America[45]

North Ronaldsay

North Ronaldsay, Iron Agerare[3][46]

Scottish Blackface

Scottish Borders, about 1500not at risk[47]

Shetland

Shetland, Iron AgeUK and North America[48]

Soay

Soay, St Kilda, Neolithic or Bronze Agerare[49][4]

Extinct breeds

A Paisley Terrier

Prior to their demise, the Paisley Terrier contributed to the bloodline of the Yorkshire Terrier and the Scottish Tan Face to the Boreray sheep. Although Galloway Ponies were praised by Gervaise Markham in the 17th century for their "fine shape, easie pace, pure metall and infinit toughness", true to form Samuel Johnson described them as "common hackneys".[50] It shares its origins with the still extant Fell Pony. A model of the Grice, whose habit of attacking lambs cannot have aided its survival, was recreated by a taxidermist in 2006.[7]

BreedSpeciesDate of OriginLocation of OriginDate of extinction
Paisley Terrier or Clydesdale TerrierDog19th centuryPaisley, Clyde Valley20th century[51]
Galloway PonyHorse16th century or earlierGallowaypost 1901[50]
GricePigUnknownHighlands and Islands (also Ireland)c. 1930[7]
Scottish Dunface or Old Scottish ShortwoolSheepIron AgeHighlands and Islands (previously British Isles)late 19th century[52] (Survives as Shetland, Boreray, North Ronaldsay, Hebridean.)

See also

References