NEW YORK -- One is a rugged, versatile hunter conditioned to withstand frosty Hungarian winters. The other is a happy-go-lucky companion from the island of Madagascar. Both will join the pack at the Westminster Kennel Club show next year.

The wirehaired visla and the coton de tulear are the latest breeds to be added to the nation's premier canine competition, set for Feb. 16-17. The club's leaders -- and Luna the coton de tulear and Falko the wirehaired visla -- looked ahead to the show at a news conference Tuesday at Madison Square Garden.

Luna stood politely as organizers discussed plans for the first Westminster show to include her small-but-sturdy breed, dubbed the "royal dog of Madagascar" and known for its flowing, cotton-like coat and chipper disposition.

"I say they're a big dog in a small dog's boots," Luna's breeder and co-owner, Adrianne Dering, said afterward. The breed initially developed on its own in the island nation off southeastern Africa, then became popular with Madagascar's aristocracy and later with French colonists, according to the United States of America Coton de Tulear Club.

"They're just very adaptable, and they like everybody," Dering said. Prospective owners need to be prepared to brush the dogs' long coats a few times a week, unless they're kept in a shorter cut.

Falko, a wirehaired visla owned by Anton Sagh of Montreal, Canada, relaxed on the floor before his star turn Tuesday. While the breed can be low-key, the wirehaired visla was bred to be hardy, all-weather hunting aides in the rough terrain of northern Hungary, with a brushy coat and somewhat heavier build than its cousin the visla.

"They're just phenomenal in the field," but "really easygoing to live with," though they do benefit from a yard to run in or a few-mile walk each day," Wirehaired Visla Club of America President Jean Schroeder said by phone.

Breeds are added to the show after the American Kennel Club recognizes them, which requires having several hundred dogs of the breed nationwide, among other criteria. There are now 180 AKC-recognized breeds.