
Does it really now?![]()
Playing the devil's advocate ... white toes on a lab would definitely fall under the category of weird recessive trait that 1. might be linked to cross-breeding, or 2. might be linked recessive health problems. Repetitive line-breeding/inbreeding can throw things like that too. Just food for thought.
LetItSnow, I firmly believe that all standards are written with function in mind. Does everyone that breeds/shows conform to it? Absolutely not. In my breeding practices, do I try to? Yes.
The show German Shepherds are a perfect example. They have pelvic angles significantly less than 30, and they have beautiful flying trots. But what people don't realize is how useless that movement is.
Bracco Pointer said:Here's a link to the GSD's illustrated standard by Linda Shaw. She goes over specific examples of how each change to angulation changes movement, etc. She mentions the ideal angle for the GSD's pelvis to be 30-35 degrees, but dogs like that are often overlooked in the show ring because they don't have the dramatic movement of the over-angulated dogs.
http://www.workingdogs.com/lshaw1.htm
That's interesting... So are you saying that the reason why the messed up breeds are the way they are because judges are corrupt and don't judge based on standards which should be good for the health of the breed? I haven't heard that one before
I'm not either or disagree on what Bracco said (because I don't know dogs like she(?) does), but this wouldn't the first animal where judging standards have resulted in animals that are not necessarily suitable for performance.
I took what bracco said to mean that the judging standards are suitable for performance, but that the judges just don't follow them and judge based on flair or whatever suits their fancy, leading to that breed's demise. Maybe I read that wrong.

My reference to show Shepherds was to the dogs themselves, not the standard. They shouldn't have the angles they do, but people have bred dogs that look flashy (and are useless). If judges understood the standard and function then they could see that the exaggerated trot of the show dogs does not fit the breed's function.
I have a question that's not really on topic...
In Germany, to get your GS registered you have to send in hip and dental x-rays (?) to make sure you have a dog that's healthy in those aspects. Is it the same in the US, too? I don't know if other breeds do that, too, in Germany, but I was just wondering if anyone knew about that..
certain breeds need to get certifications in certain aspects. We used to do some of this at school in ophtho and cardio rotations.
cardio was mostly for cavaliers
ophtho for havanese, etc. We did some ERG-type stuff as well as basic eye exams
They don't have to do these things to register with the AKC though. Some breed clubs have pretty strict codes and will only list breeders who health test, but there's no registration restriction for it like there is in Germany.
Do you think there would be any way to make health checks a requirement if enough people were for it? Good breeders shouldn't have a problem with is as they want their dogs to be healthy anyways..
If judges understood the standard and function then they could see that the exaggerated trot of the show dogs does not fit the breed's function.
Most judges do a very good job considering they often judge dozens of breeds
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In the end, the bottom line is that I don't see the value of 'pure' breeds. Hell, almost all of the very best-performing dogs in the world - Iditarod/Yukon Quest/etc athletes - are technically mutts. (I'm just using that type of working dog as an example because it's maybe the only one I'm intimately familiar with.)
Alaskan huskies may be mutts, but they are still bred in a very specific way to have certain traits. You couldn't take any dog off of the street and plug it into their bloodlines and get winning dogs.
Right. But there's a heckuva lot less consistent genetic problems like you see in the tightly studbook-limited breeds, since there's no breed registry issues to content with. I don't have any issue with breeding for positive traits; it's the "appearance at the cost of everything else" approach of (some? many? most?) breed clubs that leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
Funny you should mention that, because I have personally worked on a study concerning an encephalopathy that occurs in certain lines of Alaskan huskies.
(but I know what you are getting at)
But the point is: If you can localize a genetic association for that encephalopathy, create a reasonably-priced test, then there's very little getting in the way of making it go away.

Do that with a registry breed and ... you've still got a mountain to overcome. Look at Dalmatians and their SLC2A9 gene. How easy would it be to fix that problem? (It's already been done, right? It's just that the lineage isn't accepted into the registry....). I think it SUCKS for Dalmatians in general that something so easy to fix is perpetuated in their line simply because of resistance in the breeding and standards community, where they care more about the studbook than the health of the breed. And that's just one easy example to think of. 🙁
You have a paper on the encephalopathy? I'd love to read it just out of interest in the animals. One of the most fun experiences of my life was running a team of dogs that competed in the Iditarod.
So is it this:
Knowing that, and knowing that many (some? most?) of the breed clubs are promoting practices that lower the overall health of the breed makes me stubbornly resistant to the show community. Obviously you and I disagree, and that's cool. 🙂 And I am certainly not saying that all breeders are irresponsible. But thanks for all your info - it's a lot of really useful info.
I'm imagining a Disney movie about an out-of-place mutt outperforming all the purebreds in a sporting competition of some type. It would be like Babe, but for dogs.
This is the one that always really gets me angry. No f*ckin excuse.Yep. The Dalmatian-GSP outcrosses eliminating the hyperuricosuria mutation and not being accepted into the breed is a big black mark on that entire breed IMO.
I'm imagining a Disney movie about an out-of-place mutt outperforming all the purebreds in a sporting competition of some type. It would be like Babe, but for dogs.
I think that some variant of this was written in 1903 and was called The Call of the Wild perhaps you may have heard of it. 😉