The only way to know for sure if a dog is a purebred blue heeler is through genetic testing and/or going to a reputable breeder and purchasing a dog whose parents are on site.
You have a purebred horse and get it pregnant with a horse that is purebred. Then the baby will be purebred. Or you can buy one in the sales. Blue stars means that the horse is purebred.
when they grow up they will look like a breed or if you need to know sooner you can do a dna test
Blue nose is not a breed its a color, and its pretty obvious the dog would be a blue looking shade of grey with some or no white.
"a miniature Queensland Heeler. ." says original poster. Queensland heeler is slang for austrailian cattle dog, which there are two distinct breeds; the acd and the australian stumpy tailed cattledog. teddy is neither, but a mix, deffinitely including australian cattledog. there is no such things as a "miniature" Queensland heeler. ACD's are also known as queensland heelers or blue heelers, and occur in either red or blue phase. they are born white, and blue or red up toward maturity due to the ticking gene, introduced to the breed when the dalmation was used to create it. teddy appears to be at least 50% Cattledog, probably with catahoula leopard dog int there somewhere as well. as with most mixed breeds, it's impossible to tell his exact lineage, but displays the intelligence and trainability of a cattledog 1oo%
The puppies are mutts. Not the dogs who breed together. Unless of course their birth parents are mutts, then they are. But if you bred a dog that was pure bred, with a different breed of pure bred, then the puppies would be considered mutts. Not pure bred.Another answer:The offspring of two different purebred dogs are crossbreeds, not mutts. "Mutt," like the word "mongrel," implies a dog of indeterminate breeding; in other words, it's lineage is so mixed you can't tell what it is.
If the dog comes from registered (AKC) parents, the pup will have papers that come with it. If there are no papers, then look up the breed on the AKC web site. You can read the description of the breed, and then look at your dog, how well does it match? If there are just a few faults, like height or weight that's off a little, chances are you have a pure breed. If there is a lot off, like colors that are not allowed, weird ears, of different kind of coat, chances are you have a mix.
Your best bet is to go to the "Breeder's Club" for the type of breed you have and they can tell you where you can get the papers. All you need is verification that the dog is a blue-blood in that particular breed. Good luck Marcy
If you shop around on the Internet, you can compare the different dog DNA tests that are available these days. A DNA test would be the only way to tell what any dog's heritage is.
Males have a purple to dark blue colored cere (nose) and females have a white to light pink to brown (when ready to breed) cere.
Gina Morley has: Played Jan Phillips in "Neighbours" in 1985. Played Journalist in "Blue Heelers" in 1994. Played Pub Patron in "Blue Heelers" in 1994. Played Karen in "The Renovators" in 2006. Played Lillian Newman in "City Homicide" in 2007. Played Rachael in "The Silence Between Us" in 2007. Played Janie in "Two Die" in 2009. Played Amanda in "A Bitter Sip of Life" in 2010. Played Journo in "Underbelly Files: Tell Them Lucifer Was Here" in 2011.
There is no such thing as a "pure bred" pit bull as recognized by any reputable dog registry. Pit Bulls are a mixture of American Staffordshire Bull Terrier and other breeds.
Blood lines. The "bully pits" are a new breed called the American Bully. Which often have lines like gotti or razors edge. The American Pit Bull Terrier, is a breed that throws medium sized dogs, and are usually not blue. American Bullies are known to be blue, when you see a full blue litter of pups, they are most likely American Bullies.