A breeder should know 100%. Breeders should be able to provide pure breed rabbits BC people that usually buy from breeders want a rabbit for a specific reason. If I want a purebred angora for spinning wool I'm going to go to a reputable breeder and they better know what they have if I'm paying for the breed. Just like with my Flemish giant I got her BC I wanted a large rabbit and if it had been a mixed breed I would've been mad.
Agreed w/regard to responsible breeders.
Now with rescues youre not really going for a certain breed most of the time. You go to adopt a rabbit in need clearly for a pet. I mean Polly was marked as a french lop which she isn't but I don't care BC I got her as a pet. When you buy from a rescue they're all the same price and the price isn't dependent on breed. You are paying for a pet and the care the rescue took for the rabbit. I just don't think its logical to go to a rescue and expect a pure bred. You should look at the pic on pet finder decide if you like it and then meet it.
This is where dog and cat rescues were at before breed-specific organizations began to develop in the late '80s. Prospective adopters originally had very low expectations: a dog was a dog--maybe small/medium/large, and maybe short- or long-haired. A cat was definitely *just* a cat. A family or individual went to the local animal control ("pound"), looked at the kennels/cages, and selected an animal. If none of the animals appealed, maybe the family/individual drove one town over or similar.
Then the situation began to change and, correspondingly, prospective adopters learned to look to different sources when they had a breed preference.
From the "Whole Dog Journal" (September 2013 issue), Heather Houlahan's article educates the reader on how to discriminate between legitimate and non-legitimate rescue organizations. Ms. Houlahan gives a good history of how dog (and, by extension, cat) rescue got to where it is today.
Here is her first paragraph:
'In the 1980s, a new kind of dog adoption organization started to emerge. The lovers of specific breeds of dogs, alarmed and disgusted to see their dogs languishing in shelters, got together to pull dogs from shelters and to step in where possible to prevent them from landing there. In some cases the rescue group was a branch of the breed club. The dogs were fostered in the private homes of people who were highly knowledgeable about the breed often breeders, and usually long-time owners who were well qualified to address breed-typical behavior and health issues.'
It's now the case that, for anyone wanting a specific breed of dog, the AKC's website links to breed club rescue committees. For cats, almost every TICA-recognized breed has an organized rescue committee (I just checked via Internet search on several well-known breeds, and could see others on later pages). Unfortunately, the "Rescue" page at
www.tica.org is out of order. The point is that potential cat adopters' expectations have also been raised: if they have a specific breed of cat in mind, they can find it. Of course, Petfinder has been a godsend to both animals and people in finding perfect matches!
Rabbit rescue stands now in a position similar to those of dog and cat rescue 30 years ago, except that Petfinder now exists. Transport hasn't yet been overcome, though.... It may be that somewhere, soon, rabbit people with breed knowledge and expertise will decide to form a small, independent group for Breed A. It will be small at first; others will ask, "Why just one breed?" like they did when this trend started with dogs and cats. (I was living only with cats until 1998, so I was first aware of the cat rescue org's; I thought it was a
terrific idea!)
Then, partisans of a second breed with special care requirements (diet? grooming? birthing? low level of excitement in the home?) will say, "Why can't we do that? Too many of 'our breed' rabbits aren't making it after they're adopted out. I keep hearing from my friends/on the Internet/at shows that about __% of their bunnies don't survive adoption because ____."
And so it will go. Eventually (and this may take several years, but who knows? given connectivity), the "general" rabbit rescues will indeed have "general" rabbits, and the breed-specific rescues will be the place to find a specific breed of rabbit.
It's just not that way right now, but I would be surprised for this way to continue. Ideally, of course, ARBA would lead the way, but the odds of that happening are probably as good as those for a rabbit to lay Easter eggs. The AKC had to be dragged, kicking and screaming, into listing rescue on its website, but now
www.AKC.org looks as if the independent rescue committees were the AKC's idea in the first place!