It's All In The Genes
As dog breeders, we engage in genetic
"experiments" each time we plan a mating. The type of
mating selected should coincide with your goals. To some breeders,
determining which traits will appear in the offspring of a mating
is like rolling the dice - a combination of luck and chance. For
others, producing certain traits involves more skill than luck -
the result of careful study and planning. As breeders, we must
understand how we manipulate genes within our breeding stock to
produce the kinds of dogs we want. We have to first understand
dogs as a species, then dogs as genetic individuals.
The species, Canis familiaris, includes all
breeds of the domestic dog. Although we can argue that there is
little similarity between a Chihuahua and a Saint Bernard, or that
established breeds are separate entities among themselves, they
all are genetically the same species. While a mating within a
breed may be considered outbred, it still must be viewed as part
of the whole genetic picture: a mating within an isolated, closely
related, interbred population. Each breed was developed by close
breeding and inbreeding among a small group of founding canine
ancestors, either through a long period of genetic selection or by
intensely inbreeding a smaller number of generations. The process
established the breed's characteristics and made the dogs in it
breed true.
When evaluating your breeding program, remember
that most traits you're seeking cannot be changed, fixed or
created in a single generation. The more information you can
obtain on how certain traits have been transmitted by your dog's
ancestors, the better you can prioritize your breeding goals. Tens
of thousands of genes interact to produce a single dog. All genes
are inherited in pairs, one pair from the father and one from the
mother. If the pair of inherited genes from both parents is
identical, the pair is called homozygous. If the genes in the pair
are not alike, the pair is called heterozygous. Fortunately, the
gene pairs that make a dog a dog and not a cat are always
homozygous. Similarly, the gene pairs that make a certain breed
always breed true are also homozygous. . Therefore, a large
proportion of homozygous non-variable pairs - those that give a
breed its specific standard - exist within each breed. It is the
variable gene pairs, like those that control color, size and
angulation, that produce variations within a breed.
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Breeding by Pedigree
Outbreeding brings together two dogs less
related than the average for the breed. This promotes more
heterozygosity, and gene diversity within each dog by matching
pairs of unrelated genes from different ancestors. Outbreeding can
also mask the expression of recessive genes, and allow their
propagation in the carrier state.
Most outbreeding tends to produce more
variation within a litter. An exception would be if the parents
are so dissimilar that they create a uniformity of heterozygosity.
This is what usually occurs in a mismating between two breeds. The
resultant litter tends to be uniform, but demonstrates
"half-way points" between the dissimilar traits of the
parents. Such litters may be phenotypically uniform, but will
rarely breed true due to the mix of dissimilar genes.
A reason to outbreed would be to bring in new
traits that your breeding stock does not possess. While the
parents may be genetically dissimilar, you should choose a mate
that corrects your dog's faults but phenotypically complements
your dog's good traits.

It is not unusual to produce an excellent
quality dog from an outbred litter. The abundance of genetic
variability can place all the right pieces in one individual. Many
top-winning show dogs are outbred. Consequently, however, they may
have low inbreeding coefficients and may lack the ability to
uniformly pass on their good traits to their offspring. After an
outbreeding, breeders may want to breed back to dogs related to
their original stock, to increase homozygosity and attempt to
solidify newly acquired traits.
Linebreeding attempts to concentrate the genes
of a specific ancestor or ancestors through their appearance
multiple times in a pedigree. The ancestor should appear behind
more than one offspring. If an ancestor always appears behind the
same offspring, you are only linebreeding on the approximately 50
percent of the genes passed to the offspring and not the ancestor
itself.
It is better for linebred ancestors to appear
on both the sire's and the dam's sides of the pedigree. That way
their genes have a better chance of pairing back up in the
resultant pups. Genes from common ancestors have a greater chance
of expression when paired with each other than when paired with
genes from other individuals, which may mask or alter their
effects.
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A linebreeding may produce a puppy with
magnificent qualities, but if those qualities are not present in
any of the ancestors the pup has been linebred on, it may not
breed true. Therefore, careful selection of mates is important,
but careful selection of puppies from the resultant litter is also
important to fulfill your genetic goals. Without this, you are
reducing your chances of concentrating the genes of the linebred
ancestor.
Increasing an individual's homozygosity through
linebreeding may not, however, reproduce an outbred ancestor. If
an ancestor is outbred and generally heterozygous (Aa), increasing
homozygosity will produce more AA and aa. The way to reproduce an
outbred ancestor is to mate two individuals that mimic the
appearance and pedigree of the ancestor's parents.
Inbreeding significantly increases
homozygosity, and therefore uniformity in litters. Inbreeding can
increase the expression of both beneficial and detrimental
recessive genes through pairing up. If a recessive gene (a) is
rare in the population, it will almost always be masked by a
dominant gene (A). Through inbreeding, a rare recessive gene (a)
can be passed from a heterozygous (Aa) common ancestor through
both the sire and dam, creating a homozygous recessive (aa)
offspring. Inbreeding does not create undesirable genes, it simply
increases the expression of those that are already present in a
heterozygous state.

Inbreeding can exacerbate a tendency toward
disorders controlled by multiple genes, such as hip dysplasia and
congenital heart anomalies. Unless you have prior knowledge of
what milder linebreedings on the common ancestors have produced,
inbreeding may expose your puppies (and puppy buyers) to
extraordinary risk of genetic defects. Research has shown that
inbreeding depression, or diminished health and viability through
inbreeding is directly related to the amount of detrimental
recessive genes present. Some lines thrive with inbreeding, and
some do not. |