![]() The USDA, which regulates veterinary medicines, does not extend approval for the use of the standard rabies vaccine with “hybrids” (the vaccine is approved for use in dogs, cats, ferrets, and horses). So, a wolfdog who bites a person can be considered a rabies risk - even if they’ve been vaccinated. While the federal government officially sees them as domestic pets (and leaves their regulation to individual states and municipalities), they’re treated as wild animals when it comes to rabies. What’s more, there’s no approved rabies vaccination for wolfdogs. ![]() They’re permitted in some places, forbidden in others and are showing up on breed ban lists, along with Pits and other so-called “dangerous breeds.” Advocates of wolfdogs say they can be wonderful pets, while opponents argue that they’re unpredictable, untrainable, and inherently dangerous. Wolfdogs are perhaps the most misunderstood - and, many would argue, mismanaged - animals in America. ![]() Wolfdogs as PetsĪs with many things, the reality is not so simple. Buy a wolfdog, the thinking goes, and live out your Jack London fantasies, even if you’re in Akron rather than Anchorage. It’s both understandable and surprising that people want to take a bit of that wildness home in the shape of a wolf/dog mix - or “wolfdog” - which some consider to represent the best of both worlds: a dog’s friendly companionship paired with a wolf’s good looks and untamed nature. With their bigger brains, stronger muscles, and teeth and jaws many times more powerful than any dog’s, they’re also quite dangerous, capable of killing an elk, a moose, even a bison. See our privacy statement to find out how we collect and use your data, to contact us with privacy questions or to exercise your personal data rights.įor centuries, wolves - incredibly charismatic, highly social and extremely intelligent - have held a special place in our consciousness, starring in as many nightmares as they have in paintings and pop songs.
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