Campbell Island
Campbell Island cattle are a feral-derived heritage population descended from domestic cattle taken to Campbell Island, a remote subantarctic island of New Zealand, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. After decades of isolation in cold, wet, windy conditions, the surviving animals became small, hardy, and strongly selected by climate and sparse forage. The island herd was removed during ecological restoration, but a tiny number of animals and genetic material were preserved for rare-breed conservation.
This is not a production breed in the usual commercial sense. Campbell Island cattle are managed by specialist rare-breed keepers who value them as a living genetic record of isolation, adaptation, and founder effects. Practical breeding requires attention to pedigree, genetic bottlenecks, and cooperation among conservation herds. Their background suggests toughness, but they still need ordinary cattle care: secure pasture, shelter from severe weather, good handling systems, and careful health monitoring.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Blaze Faced, Blue Roan, Brindle, Brockle Faced, Brown, Brown and White, Dun, Gray, Grey, Highbelt, Highpark, Lineback, Mottled, Pied, Red, Red and White, Red Roan, Riggit, Roan, Silver, Solid Black, Solid Red, Solid White, Speckled, Spotted, White, White Faced, Yellow