The
FCI (Fédération Cynologique Internationale) is the World Canine
Organization. It has 80 members, almost every country in the world
has a Kennel Club that is a member. One National Kennel Club is
recognized from each country (the AKC in the US) and that National
Kennel Club issues their own pedigrees and trains and licenses their
own judges. The FCI also mandates breeding rules and a Code of
Ethics to be followed by breeders of each member country.
The FCI recognizes 337 breeds, each of them is the 'property' of a
specific country (normally the country of origin). The 'owner'
countries of the breeds write the breed standard for their breed and
the adoption, translation and updating of the standards is carried
out by the FCI. The Rottweiler originated in Germany and the
ADRK (Allgemeiner
Deutscher Rottweiler Klub has the right and responsibility to
set, maintain and revise the breed standard for the Rottweiler for
the rest of the world.
Why do Rottweilers now have natural tails?
In 1999 the country of Germany passed a law that made it illegal to
dock a dog's tail or crop a dog's ears. The basis for this law was
the fact that the practice of docking and cropping was deemed to be
inhumane treatment of animals.
In order to comply with the new law, the ADRK revised the
Breed
Standard for the Rottweiler and this new breed standard required
a natural tail. The FCI translated and adopted the new breed
standard and gave all FCI member countries several years to comply
with the new breed standard.
A docked Rottweiler does not conform to the current FCI breed
standard. As each FCI member country finalizes their adoption of the
new breed standard Rottweiler breeders in those countries will no
longer be allowed to dock and docked Rottweilers will be
disqualified at shows and prohibited from breeding.
The AKC (American Kennel Club) is not a member of the FCI. AKC does
not follow any of the rules and regulations set by the FCI for the
rest of the world and they do not always follow the breed standards
set by the countries of origin. The AKC Breed Standard for the
Rottweiler has always deviated from the FCI standard and they are
currently struggling to deal with the breed standard regarding the
tail.
There are a number of Rottweiler breeders in the United States that
follow the FCI Code of Ethics for breeding and strictly follow the
FCI/ADRK Breed Standard for the Rottweiler and those breeders will
all leave natural tails on their dogs.