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this is paige finnerty who is a hippo shagger

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[[Image:Pigrunt.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Litters of piglets often include a runt]]
[[Image:Pigrunt.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Litters of piglets often include a runt]]

Revision as of 10:20, 9 November 2011

this is paige finnerty who is a hippo shagger

Litters of piglets often include a runt

In a group of animals (usually a litter of animals born in multiple births), a runt is a member which is smaller or weaker than the others.[1] Due to its small size, a runt in a litter faces obvious disadvantages, including difficulties with competing with its siblings for survival and possible rejection from its mother. Also in a domestic dog litter, most puppies would have to make room for the runt to get milk from the mother. Therefore, in the wild, a runt is less likely to survive infancy. In his book The Selfish Gene, biologist Richard Dawkins speculates that runts may be a parent's way of 'hedging its bets' — if food is plentiful, it gets an extra offspring, if not, it lets it die having only invested little in it in the first place.[2]

Even among domestic animals, runts often face rejection. They may be placed under the direct care of an experienced animal breeder, although the animal's size and weakness coupled with the lack of natural parental care make this difficult. Some tamed animals are the result of reared runts.

Backyard breeders often come under fire for the rearing of unusually small dogs of toy breeds, which most dog clubs[who?] condemn as deliberately perpetuating runts that may incur future health complications and expensive veterinary care.

In popular culture

  • Wilbur the pig from Charlotte's Web is a runt.
  • Shade the bat from Silverwing is a runt.
  • Fiver from Watership Down is a runt.
  • Clifford the Big Red Dog is a runt when he is born, but he eventually grows to be 25 feet tall.
  • Ruth from the Dragonriders of Pern series is a runt.
  • Jock was the runt of a litter of Staffordshire Bull Terriers who was saved from drowning by Sir Percy Fitzpatrick, who later wrote about his life with the dog in Jock of the Bushveld.
  • Cadpig, a female Dalmatian puppy in Dodie Smith's children's novel The Hundred and One Dalmatians, is the runt of her litter. Thought at first to be stillborn, she is revived by Mr. Dearly. (In the animated disney film, she is a female. And in the live-action disney film, Cadpig is a still a female aptly named "Two-Tone") and Lucky, a male Dalmatian puppy is also a runt.
  • Babe, the titular piglet hero of Dick King-Smith's book (and the popular film based on the novel), is a runt. In fact, he was chosen for the competition at which Farmer Hoggett won him essentially because he was a runt - his runt status therefore saving his life and shaping his destiny.
  • Scourge from the Warriors book series was a runt. It is revealed the manga The Rise Of Scourge that he was a runt of his litter of three kittens, and was fittingly named Tiny. His siblings often excluded him in games and made fun of him and bullied him because he was smaller than them. Also, Tiny felt that his mother didn't like him as much as his litter mates. This mistreatment from his family, paired off with circumstances at the time, ultimately led him to become the most dangerous, evil and powerful cat in the town.
  • The title character from the novel Runt, as the name implies, is the smallest of his wolf litter.
  • Wilfred from the 2011 comedy of the same name was the runt of his litter.
  • The direwolf Ghost in the A Song of Ice and Fire book series was the runt of his litter of six pups, as well as an albino. However, the pups were adopted by the children of House Stark, and Ghost was reared by Jon Snow.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?runt
  2. ^ Dawkins, Richard (1989). The Selfish Gene. Oxford University Press. pp. 130–131. ISBN 0-19-217773-7.