Part Three: Renewing the System
Purebred Dog Breeds into the
Twenty-first Century: Achieving Genetic Health for Our Dogs
By J. Jeffrey Bragg 1996 - Free public reproduction and distribution rights
The Crux of the Problem
AS WE FACE the millennium, the one problem which most concerns the
entire purebred dog fancy is genetic defects. Breeders used to worry about
overshot/undershot bite and cryptorchidism. Not much else of a genetic nature was
cause for concern; fanciers were a lot more worried about distemper, hepatitis and
internal parasites. Breeding programmes concentrated on individuals' visions of
canine excellence. Then in the 1960s the tip of the genetic iceberg emerged as concern
grew about a joint disorder called hip dysplasia. A control programme involving the
examination of hip x-rays by a skilled scrutineer and the maintenance of a registry
of animals "cleared" of the defect was established at the Ontario Veterinary College
at Guelph, Ontario. Now after three decades of the OVC programme it has been pretty
well established that "clear" animals with several generations of "clear" ancestry
can nonetheless produce dysplastic progeny (Chidiac-Storimans 1995)! Hence the OVC
control programme would seem to be of questionable effectiveness. As the generations
of closed-studbook breeding have advanced, a panoply of other inherited problems has
emerged in purebred dog breeds. There is no need to list them here; the list would be
on its way to obsolescence in a month or so; veterinary research continues to define
more inherited disorders regularly. Many breeders now run four-way screening programmes;
some may screen for even more problems. Many breeders' selection programmes for various
kinds of canine excellence must now be at a standstill -- all the selection is going
into the effort to produce stock "clear" for eyes, hips, elbows, blood disorders,
endocrine dysfunction, etc. Yet thirty years of x-rays have not eliminated hip
dysplasia -- it is now widespread in breeds in which it was not a problem thirty
years ago.
In December 1994 "Time" magazine published a scathing indictment
of the American Kennel Club and of purebred dogs and their breeders, targeting in a
cover story the problem of genetic ills, suggesting that the best use of pedigree papers
was for housebreaking the puppies and recommending that the public satisfy its desire
for canine companionship with mongrels. Since then, most of us have known we have an
untenable situation on our hands. Our reputation as breeders of purebreds is now in
tatters; we are caricatured in the media as greedy, uncaring producers of degenerate
animals. The CKC's main response to the situation was a Board policy statement that
"reputable breeders will provide a detailed written guarantee of the present and future
good health of the dog and will not hesitate to uphold their guarantees." The policy
statement, far from helping the situation, only saddled breeders officially with a
heavy responsibility without enacting measures which might assist them in living up
to it.
nbsp; It is time for us as dog breeders to stand up for ourselves and
for our dogs, to reject the imputation that we ourselves are individually to blame
for the problem of genetic defects, and to demand swift remedial action by the Club
and, if necessary, Agriculture Canada. The crux of the problem is the closed studbook
and with it, the ideal of breed purity, the worship of type, and the pre-eminence of
the championship show as goal and arbiter of most breeding programmes. Armed with the
concepts of population genetics, we can now examine the last century of nineteenth-century
dog breeding, ascertain what has gone wrong, and establish ways and means to correct
the situation.
EARLIER WE STATED that the recognition of a breed by a registry was a crucial event in its
history, more crucial than it need be. That is because the usual practice has been
to open the registry to foundation stock for a limited period, to inspect and
register a small population of foundation animals, and then to close the registry to
new genetic inflow forever after, with the sole exception of animals of the same
breed imported from other registries and derived from the same or closely-related
foundation stock. In recent decades there has usually been no unique Canadian
foundation stock except in the case of indigenous breeds; CKC merely accepts
registered stock from other jurisdictions. (Actually the relationship of CKC
foundation stock to that of other registries has never been clearly defined, so
far as I know. CKC accepts registration papers of other studbooks which it considers
to be "reliable." So long as the export pedigree shows three generations of registered,
numbered ancestry; import stock seems to be eligible for CKC status without question.
The criteria involved are clerical, not genetic.) Most of the breeds we are familiar
with were founded from sixty to over one hundred years ago. In those days Canada's
population was much smaller than it is now; the canine population was correspondingly
smaller, too. Thus the number of dogs accepted during the open-registry periods was
rather limited.
The canine species possesses tremendous genetic diversity as a
whole. Like most species, that diversity includes a genetic load, a wide variety of
more or less deleterious alleles, probably quite a few of them held in a state of
heterozygote superiority, so that although natural selection tends to eliminate
homozygote recessives when they segregate, the bad alleles themselves maintain a
strong presence due to the selective advantage of the superior heterozygote. What
happens when a founder event occurs? Then it is possible that bad alleles, uncommon
in the canine population as a whole, may achieve a much higher frequency of occurrence
owing to their presence in a small founder population -- especially since the
foundation stock of a newly-recognised breed will already be considerably inbred from
the breed development process. Inbreeding and selection together raise homozygosity
levels dramatically through the wholesale elimination of alleles from the genome.
Those alleles may be unwanted by the creators of a new breed; nevertheless their
elimination raises the allele frequency of whatever remains.
An Example from One Breed
THUS THE RECOGNITION of a breed creates a founder event when the
registry is opened; a limited number of breed foundation animals are selected,
often from a population which has already undergone considerable inbreeding and
selection. Let us take for an example the Siberian Husky breed. Registered in 1939,
the initial CKC population consisted of 47 animals, all belonging to or bred by one
kennel! Of those 47, nine were foundation stock of the kennel whose dogs were
registered. Two of those were males imported from Siberia -- littermate brothers!
The other seven were mostly related to one another. (Two were seven-eighths Siberian
and one-eighth Malamute.) The other thirty-eight were all progeny and grand-progeny
of the founders. Of the nine foundation animals, two were not bred from at all. Two
were mated -- once only -- to each other: one only of their progeny contributed to
further breeding. Of the two Siberia import males, one brother was always bred to
the same bitch, producing a large number of progeny of identical pedigree; the other
brother was usually bred to daughters of the first brother. Today, Siberian Husky
lines that trace directly back to the Canadian foundation stock owe 25% of their
pedigree lines to the first brother, 15% to the second brother, and 27% to the first
brother's invariable mate! Two-thirds of the genetic heritage of these modern Siberian
Huskies derives from only three foundation animals! This is not an exceptional
situation, it is a fair example of the early breeding history of CKC breeds.
In the case of the Siberian Husky, then, (which happens to be my
breed, with whose early history I am reasonably well familiar), The Canadian Kennel
Club opened a registry in 1939, inspected one kennel's dogs and admitted four dozen
closely-related individuals to the registry, which was then closed permanently. No
effort was made to ensure a broad foundation, nor a numerous one, nor a genetically
diverse one.
Just how permanently the registry was closed I recently found
out when I imported from Russia a dog bred to the Siberian Husky standard! The dog
was born in the Ural Mountains well within the boundaries of Siberia, from parents
of Chukotkan village origins; he had three generations of known ancestry (without
registration numbers since there is no official "Siberian Husky" registry in Russia).
I was immediately told that the Club "did not know what to do" about my application
to register the dog, that the protocols used to register breed foundation animals in
1939 were no longer valid, and that my dog "should not be used for breeding because
it would probably be a long process," in spite of the fact that the dog had a valid
FCI Export Pedigree from the Czech Republic (through which he was exported). A year
and a half later after repeated in camera discussions, the import was refused
recognition by the Board and Registration Committee on grounds of inadequate
information (no ancestral registration numbers). Repeated calls for Club inspection
of the import and offers to submit the animal to DNA tests and progeny testing were
ignored. The registry is closed -- even to new Siberia imports!
For the past fifty-six years, then, all Siberian Huskies bred
in Canada have stemmed from the 1939 registrations, or from American imports, which
mostly stem from the same dogs CKC registered, plus perhaps three additional animals.
The original foundation animals were poorly utilised and subsequent generations
were so closely inbred that the two Siberia import males plus one bitch are even
today still statistically equivalent to grandparents of every single Siberian now
registered!
Thus the original founder event in my breed plus the closed
studbook has resulted in a state of forced inbreeding for Siberian Huskies. There
is no such thing as an outcross mating in Siberians in any genetically meaningful
sense. A sire can be found, perhaps, who may have no ancestors in common with a
bitch for the last 5 or 6 generations -- if one knows all Siberian bloodlines well
enough and doesn't mind going a few thousand miles to find him -- but he will not
be an outcross, because all of his ancestors and all of the bitch's ancestors are
the same animals, once the pedigree is taken back far enough. It would be difficult
to calculate inbreeding coefficients for fifteen to thirty generations of ancestry;
software to handle calculations of that nature doesn't seem to be generally available
to breeders. (After all, a thirty-generation pedigree would contain over two billion
names...)
THIRTY GENERATIONS of breeding all going back to ten dogs or fewer represents an impressive
feat of sustained inbreeding! Predictably enough, Siberian Huskies, which eighty-five
years ago were probably the toughest, hardiest variety of dogs on earth, now suffer
from the same gamut of genetic defects that afflicts other breeds. Few if any registered
Siberians are now able to perform as sleddogs on anything approaching the level of the
1910 dogs imported from Siberia. Probably this is mostly due to the decline in
heterozygosity and loss of vitality through inbreeding. What is worse, unmistakable
signs of inbreeding depression are surfacing in the breed: rising numbers of Caesarean
births, smaller litters, lower birth weights, delicate nestlings prone to infection,
etc.
Breeders of domestic livestock -- cattle, poultry, sheep -- manage
to run registries and maintain breed type without imposing the concept of absolute breed
purity. They inbreed to fix desirable traits, as do dog breeders. Livestock breeders,
however, do not try to pretend that they can inbreed forever without ill effects. Thus
when inbreeding depression or genetic defects threaten, they outcross -- repeatedly, if
necessary. They can do so because they do not have closed studbooks. I do not suggest
that we slavishly copy the procedures and registry structures of livestock associations,
because I think they, too, might benefit from some restructuring in the light of modern
genetic knowledge. Nonetheless I would make the point that we in the canine fancy are in
a minority when we cling to absolute ideals of breed purity and insist on rigidly closed
studbooks.
AS A DRAMATIC CONTRAST to the foregoing example of the CKC's Siberian Husky breed foundation, let us examine for a moment the standards which Agriculture Canada now applies to new domestic animal breeds in this country, as set forth in a three-page leaflet entitled "Establishment of a New Breed of Animals in Canada." Agriculture Canada now requires that breed foundation stock (that is to say, the first generation of registered animals of a new breed) be selected from the third filial generation (F3) or later of the "evolving breed" which precedes the actual, registered new breed. It lays down no parameters for the founder generation of the evolving breed, but it does state:
The standard used for the creation of a new breed is as follows:- Minimum number of animals to constitute the foundation stock of the new breed (F3): 200 animals (unique genotypes).
- In order to reach the required 200 F3 animals and in order to provide a sufficiently wide genetic base, it is recommended that the minimum number of animals to be produced in each F level be:
F1: 60 animals
F2: 100 animals
It also stipulates that "the F3 generation is the earliest generation to become
eligible for inspection as foundation stock . . . In practice most evolving
breeds will evolve over many generations before having developed a significant
population of foundation animals."
These modern standards are at least somewhat influenced
by population genetics considerations, in an attempt to establish a basis for
genetic health and stability for new animal breeds in Canada. Yet in all
probability very few of our existing CKC dog breeds, which are arguably of much
greater economic importance than any new breed, would come anywhere near to the
foundation stock now enforced by Agriculture Canada. The sole exceptions would
probably be breeds, like the Canadian Eskimo Dog, accepted for registration
during the last decade or two. As for the Siberian Husky, its actual genetic
founders (those whose genes contributed to future generations, leaving aside
those which did not reproduce) numbered 6 only; the F1 generation which actually
reproduced numbered 8 individuals; the F2 generation which actually reproduced
numbered just 5 animals; no F3 animals were registered in the first year of CKC
registrations -- original founders, F1s and F2s were all registered together in
the first year.
Thus it is obvious that the Siberian Husky, at least, could
not begin to satisfy current Agriculture Canada standards for an appropriate number
and variety of foundation stock to establish a new breed, when traced to its
historic foundation. In all probability, few CKC breeds could do so. Yet the
registry norms that are rigidly enforced by CKC, backed up by Agriculture Canada,
make the acceptance into the studbook of badly-needed new foundation stock a complete
impossibility! Presumably Agriculture Canada has good and sufficient reasons
justifying its standard for new breeds -- that being the case, then it is a curiously
irrational situation that older, existing registered breeds not only are exempt from
any such standard, but are actually prohibited from enlarging their founder group through
the acceptance of unrelated primitive stock.
The Holistic Breed
NOW I WOULD LIKE to evoke a vision of the future -- but not the distant
future. I want to describe how dog breeds might be in the twenty-first century. Instead
of all breeds being subjected to arbitrary structures not equally well-suited to them all,
each breed would get whatever special measures its breeders thought necessary. Instead of
a fragmented canine fancy with ghettos of show fanciers, obedience buffs, and working-dog
specialists, dog breeds would have the benefit of a holistic outlook, integrating the
various aspects of canine activity and producing well-rounded, versatile, mentally stable
animals. Let me stress that the suggestions which follow will be fully practical and
down-to-earth. They involve no technology we don't already possess. They require no knowledge
that isn't already generally available. All that is needed is a proactive attitude and the
will to make necessary changes in an obsolescent structure. This vision could become a
reality within ten years' time.
At the beginning of this brief I stated that the three distinct axes
along which breeds are distinguished -- ancestry, purpose, and typology -- had to relate
fully and co-operatively, or the fulness of breed identity would be missing or marred. Let
me now describe how such a relationship might be achieved.
To begin with, we absolutely must open CKC studbooks, in every breed,
to new genetic inflow. There can be no long-term genetic health in small populations such
as our registered breeds without the periodic infusion of new genetic material. The one
big "sacrifice" we shall have to make, if it is really a sacrifice, is to abandon racist
attitudes and the concept of rigorous breed purity. We must recognise that first of all, a
dog is a dog, species Canis familiaris, and that is his true identity. He is a dog
first, before he is a Siberian Husky or a Foxhound or a Doberman; breed identity is
subordinate to species identity. We must stop treating breeds as if they were species,
abandon the rigidity and narrow typological thinking which has heretofore characterised
the canine fancy. We must recognise that dogs are unique individuals and that there is no
positive value in trying to create groups of dogs which are all clones or photocopies of a
type specimen represented by a breed standard. This should not be too hard, since breeders
and judges have never been able to arrive at agreed and consistent interpretations of breed
standards anyway. Why, then, should we pretend that a standard, which as it now exists
evokes a different imageistic interpretation in the mind of each individual breeder and
judge, describes a single ideal type?
Canine breeds can and should be differentiated, bred and maintained
on a dynamically balanced, heterozygous population basis without restriction to a closed,
historic founder group. The closed studbook and the breed purity concept are, from a
genetic point of view, simply unnecessary. Indeed, as we have seen, from the standpoint
of maintaining a genetically healthy limited population, they are thoroughly
counterproductive. Where is the logic in submitting each and every CKC breed to a registry
system which guarantees ongoing, progressive genetic degeneration, loss of species vigour
and hardiness, and saddles every breeder with the unwanted, unhappy responsibility of
producing more and more unhealthy, flawed stock as time goes by? The notion that genetic
disease can be controlled, much less eliminated, by screening programmes and selection has
not been borne out by general experience. Those who promote such a notion are engaging in
a cruel, self-serving deception. It may be that a breeder can sometimes improve his odds
against producing defective stock in a given mating by screening the parents, but experience
has proved that screening will not solve our genetic problems in any wider sense. Despite
generation after generation of "clear" stock, bloodlines can still produce more and more
affected animals. That is because our problems are inherent in the closed-studbook/incest-breeding
system. In order to restore genetic health we shall have to adopt a different system.
It will be asked, "Just how will the opening of our studbooks to outcross
stock bring about the elimination of genetic defects?" The answer is that it will not eliminate
genetic defects. That need not be the end in view. If we could somehow eliminate all the
various genes now known to produce harmful anomalies, plus all of those yet to be discovered,
we would almost certainly find that the remaining genome was non-viable, that healthy
reproduction and growth to maturity could not reliably take place. Genetic defects are not
"eliminated" in nature. Instead, random mating and behaviour patterns that discourage inbreeding
take care of the problem by ensuring high levels of heterozygosity and the consequent rarity
of defective homozygotes. If we take steps to set up similar patterns in purebred dogs, we
shall be able to reduce the level of expression of defective genes greatly, which is all that
is required. The end in view is healthy stock, not "racial purity." Purged and purified
bloodlines would be weak for other reasons, as has been explained. As the mapping of the
canine genome progresses and RFLP, allozyme or microsatellite "markers" for common genetic
defects are found, we shall probably then be able to use DNA studies to recommend matings
that will avoid the production of defective homozygote progeny -- provided that we have
made enough genetic diversity available through outcrossing to give us the genetically
distinct lines from which to choose! As things stand now, most breeds are so homozygous
that it could prove extremely difficult to find matings which would avoid one genetic
defect without reinforcing another!
New Structures for the Dog Fancy
VERY WELL, THEN, if we eliminate the closed studbook, how shall we decide
what stock to admit for registration? One must begin, of course, with the existing body of
registered stock. Thereafter, one way of proceeding might be to strengthen and empower the
breed clubs. They should be granted responsibility and autonomy: responsibility for the
welfare of their breeds, and autonomy to make the judgments and decisions necessary to
fulfil that responsibility. It should also be ensured that the breed clubs are fully
representative of all breeders, by making breed club membership a requirement for anyone
to register stock he has bred or imported.
The first task of the breed clubs would then be for each of them to
determine what sources of genetic inflow might best be employed in their breed. Breeders
alone can command the collective expertise to make that decision and it ought to be theirs
alone, but the designation of outcross sources should be obligatory, not optional. The
Siberian Husky Club of Canada, for example, would have to decide where outcross animals
might best be obtained for restoring heterozygosity to that breed; they might decide, for
example, that dogs imported from Russia and perhaps even an occasional outstanding individual
carefully selected from the present "alaskan husky" gene pool of racing sleddogs (which was
derived largely from 1910-era Siberia imports that remained in Alaska) are two logical sources.
Breeds which do not have their origins in autochthonous populations would have to seek
outcrosses in similar related breeds, as Spaniels (English Springer) and Spaniels (Welsh
Springer), or Retrievers (Labrador) and Retrievers (Flat-Coated). They would then have to set
up inspection and test-breeding procedures for admitting outcross animals. Once the outcross
sources had been designated, selection of candidate animals would in most cases be best left
to individual breeders, who might then apply to the breed club for preliminary inspection of
their outcross -- which ought not to be excessively rigorous. General soundness, reasonable
temperament, proven working ability, approximate size and physique, and acceptable overall
type would be adequate criteria, none of the foregoing to be rigidly interpreted. The outcross
should then be registered provisionally by CKC, subject to breed club inspection of two
generations of its progeny. The registry should remain permanently open to new outcross
animals. It might prove desirable to set limits to the number of outcross dogs registered
in any given year, proportionate to the overall breed population, in order that small
populations not be swamped by excessive outcrossing. Some regulation of the process would
obviously be necessary, but the best regulation would probably be breed club oversight and
guidance of the process, backed up by CKC supervision.
Advantage should be taken of DNA analysis techniques by using them to
monitor heterozygosity and relative kinship in major breeding lines. (It would also be a good
idea for the Club to offer DNA profile parentage certification.) This technology already exists
and is in use; it is rapidly becoming much more affordable. Limits should definitely be set on
inbreeding, preferably by the breed clubs, but CKC should decide maximum allowable limits of
inbreeding as a default setting. Only by the outright prohibition of excessive degrees of
inbreeding will it be possible to make the transition to a balanced-heterozygote state for
purebreds; otherwise old ways will continue through inertia and persistent typological thinking.
Assortative mating can and should become the norm for the preservation of type, mating individuals
which are phenotypically similar but unrelated or at least not closely related. The Club would
have to monitor registrations, possibly performing occasional DNA spot-checks, to ensure that
inbreeding does not take place; otherwise many would continue to breed from whatever dogs were
in their own backyard rather than seeking breed club advice to find suitable individuals from
unrelated lineage.
A Healthy Balance for Breed Identity
THE RESPONSIBILITIES of the breed club should not end with the designation of
outcross sources and the inspection of outcross candidates. If the fulness of breed identity is
to be achieved overall in each population, then the breed clubs should take on responsibility
for balancing the various facets of that breed identity. Realistic, meaningful and workable
systems should be introduced for monitoring temperament, for proving working ability and
trainability, and for evaluating type and appearance. Championship shows would then become
breed-club events, since the methods of evaluation and the various events required to test such
qualities as temperament, vigour and endurance, working ability, and trainability would be
breed-specific and under the breed clubs' oversight. That is not to say that a number of breed
clubs might not band together to stage events for several breeds simultaneously at the same
venue, but the all-breed show with all-rounder judges, under CKC rules for CKC Championship
points, would eventually be history. To ensure wholehearted support and participation by breeders,
it would probably be necessary for CKC to evolve some means of making clear on the papers of every
dog the extent to which that animal had been submitted to the testing and evaluation procedures of
the breed club and with what result. Breed club input of information to the Club's database could
be done by e-mail on the day of the event. Strong incentives for participation should be arranged
and breed clubs should be so structured that they could not be autocratically ruled by individuals
or cliques.
Registration certificates produced by CKC would carry much more detailed
information under the new system than they now do. The computer power is now available to make
this quite feasible. A certificate of registration should once again carry a pedigree of at least
four generations. A two-tier certificate system would be necessary, as no dog would be eligible
for breeding registered progeny until it had been inspected and evaluated by the breed club.
Rating and measurement protocols are already being worked out by proponents of the Advanced
Registry proposal. Broodstock certificates should carry a summary of the breed club's rating and
evaluation of the animal, together with evidence of proof tests for temperament, working ability
and trainability. All certificates should identify outcross lines and bear a quantitative estimate
of the relative heterozygosity of the animal identified by the certificate.
Breed standards would require revision under the new system. The concept of
disqualifications should probably be dropped in favour of a detailed rating system in which all
breeding stock would participate. In the case of quantitative characteristics such as height and
weight, a simple Bell-curve statistical description of the desired mean and range ought to be
sufficient, without disallowing occasional extreme examples. Working abilities ought to be clearly
defined in the breed standard and a basic performance standard given where possible. Clearer and
more detailed descriptions of desired temperament and of qualities bearing on trainability ought
to be part of the new standards. Prescriptive minutia should be minimal; it should be sufficient
merely to describe the general distinguishing features of a breed, without an excess of cosmetic
and conformation restrictions, except where indispensable breed points are involved. Type
stringencies should be relaxed considerably, allowing most breeds to become moderately heterotypic;
if qualities of working ability, hunting instincts and similar traits achieve greater emphasis,
there will be correspondingly less need for extreme type requirements to distinguish breeds.
Standards should be holistic descriptions of the breeds they identify, brief statements of
essential breed qualities, rather than typological blueprints. It is imperative to subordinate
typological thinking to considerations of utility, genetic health and hardiness. First a dog
should be healthy, balanced, of sound mind in a sound body, able to fulfil his breed purpose;
after that can come points of beauty and type but never again in the bizarrely exaggerated
fashion that now prevails in the breed rings of championship shows.
It might eventually be found desirable to quietly merge scarce and consistently unpopular breeds, as well as closely similar breeds, with populations nearest to them in general characteristics, possibly initially designating them as breed varieties. Reasonable numbers are necessary for the maintenance of a healthy population. The number of breeds recognised has continued to grow, yet the total number of dog owners in the country may not have grown proportionally. A rare breed is not the same thing as an endangered species; breeds can come and go without damage to the canine species as a whole. Breeds known to be of low viability due to their dependence for breed identity on anomalies such as achondroplasia, may have to be dropped from the registry unless evidence is advanced that they can be upgraded to certain minimum standards of health and structural soundness.
Can it Really Work?
I CAN HEAR someone objecting, after having thought about the idea of a breeding
and registry system in which outcross breeding was actually encouraged, "Surely this system will
produce some dogs which are not even recognisable representatives of their breeds! What happens
then?" Typological thinking dies hard. I used to worry lest my Siberian breeding programme should
one day produce a dog or dogs whose ears were not fully erect. It never happened. Instead something
much worse happened when I found that I was producing some dogs who ran a high risk of being unable
to lead a healthy, normal canine existence, through endocrine malfunctions, immune system weakness,
and the risk of blindness. To think I had worried about the possibility of a tipped ear, something
which would not handicap or bother the dog in the least! Let me say the following, then, to those
who worry that a balanced-heterozygote breed will engender "untypical" examples. It is far better
that our breeding occasionally engender a dog deficient in breed type, than that we should
consistently produce large numbers of dogs guaranteed to lead lives of suffering, creating anxiety,
large veterinary bills, frustration and unhappiness for their owners. That is what we are doing now.
Over sixty percent of Golden Retrievers, for example, will suffer from hip dysplasia, osteoarthritis
or osteochondritis in their lifetimes. Is that to be preferred to the possibility of producing an
occasional robust "mutt" lacking in breed type but who will nonetheless still make someone an
excellent, happy, healthy companion? I am sure that it would take awhile for all of us to learn how
to breed in this new and different way; I suppose we might produce occasional oddities in the process.
Yet I am absolutely convinced that the good results we would quickly achieve would more than make up
for the embarrassment of our failures. At the very least we should all have clean consciences once
again, knowing that we were making our best efforts, using up-to-date genetic knowledge, to produce
sane, healthy, robust canine companions. Let us not forget that as DNA mapping procedures advance
(there are at least two canine genome mapping projects now underway) our tools are going to improve
and our ability to predict what our breedings may produce will be greatly enhanced.
As things now stand, the dog fancy is in a position which is frankly untenable.
The CKC Board of Directors has unilaterally committed "reputable breeders" to the proposition of
guaranteeing the "future genetic good health" of the dogs they sell. Yet those same breeders have
no means of protecting themselves from the looming spectre of financial ruin should they be held to
such a guarantee, otherwise to the loss of public credibility. Other than the continued elaboration
of screening programmes and the Advanced Registry proposal, both of which are somewhat like applying
an adhesive bandage to a severed artery, nothing is being done about making guarantees of genetic
health a workable proposition. At present, purebred breeds -- all breeds -- show levels of genetic
defects totally inconsistent with the practical maintenance of the Board's policy. Many honest,
caring breeders are racked by torments of guilt and self-reproach brought on by the sufferings of
defective dogs, yet it is really no fault of the breeders themselves! The fault, as has been
demonstrated in this brief, lies with the closed studbook and the inbreeding system. If the
consensus of the Club is truly that purchasers of purebred dogs have a right to expect genetically
healthy animals, then the Board has no choice other than to do everything in its power to change
the existing system so that healthy animals may once again be reliably produced! That will never
happen just through Advanced Registries, higher Championship point requirements, more screening
programmes, and Board policy pronouncements. The Club must take to heart the lessons of population
genetics. It must open its studbooks to outcross stock on a permanent basis. It must take measures
against the obsessive pursuit of breed type and the worship of breed purity, measures which will
increase the health, utility, trainability and sanity of purebred dogs, measures which will balance
the elements of breed identity. There are no credible "soft options" left.
One unfortunate reality which must be faced, however, in order to bring about any
major changes involving the CKC will be the conservatism and resistance to change of the Board
and of the "old hands" -- the ruling oligarchy of the Club. The CEO and the Board will almost
certainly aggressively defend the status quo no matter how urgent the need for change. At present,
for example, they turn down requests for the registration of new foundation animals with
statements such as this one: "The CKC takes pride in registering dogs based on accurate and
complete information and we will continue to strive for these high standards." Yet when that
statement was written, the Club was still registering Canadian-bred litters whose parentage
information was supported only by a signed registration application form filled out by the owners
of the dam and sire. Under that system of information gathering it is regularly necessary for
the Board to cancel litter registrations when it becomes evident that the parents of some litters
are not both of the same breed. No one knows how many litters go unchallenged which, although
purebred with both parents of the same breed, have their parentage misrepresented because the
actual sire of the litter is not the dog entered on the application form. In the absence of DNA
testing, how can the substitution of sires be detected?
Meanwhile the United Kennel Club, a "dissident registry" in Kalamazoo, MI,
USA, which now registers about a quarter of a million dogs annually, has already instituted a
process for the verification of parentage by DNA profiling! This is the first time that DNA
profiling has been made routinely available to dog breeders, and UKC is the first canine registry
in the world to offer such assurance of verified parentage. Innovations such as this make the
Club's defensive statements about its high standards sound rather hollow.
nbsp; Anyway, those of us who seek reform will have to contend with a Club
establishment which will attempt to make a virtue of the very things which most threaten the
genetic health of CKC dog breeds: the closed studbook, the breed purity concept, the endless
inbreeding, the constant refinement of type, the pre-eminence of the Championship show. Those
who dare to challenge the existing system will have to put up with being made to look foolish
or even villainous by the solemn pronouncements of the old guard. We should all realise that
the Club establishment is unlikely to initiate serious action for change in the absence of
grass-roots pressure from the general membership. It is up to us to initiate serious dialogue
along the lines outlined in this brief, to research ways and means to promote a different,
healthier method of purebred dog breeding, and to raise the consciousness both of novices and
of old hands regarding the genetic dilemma which now faces us.
Deep structural change cannot occur without widespread debate among
fanciers, because new and different concepts sound threatening when they are first described.
Once the reasoning behind them has been adequately discussed, the threat often disappears.
Someone may ask, for example, "What about these open-ended Breed Standards? A Bell-curve
statistical description of a breed's height standard may be an adequate formula, but what
if the mean is set at 22.5 inches and you don't disqualify the 25-inch dogs. Then maybe in
a few years the mean may drift upward to around 24 inches, with hardly a single dog under 22
inches. What then?" My answer would be that the whole point of the balanced-heterozygote
system is its healthy flexibility. A stubborn insistence on narrow tolerances in matters such
as height at withers usually involves the sacrifice of other worthwhile qualities anyway, as
too many otherwise good animals must be discarded only because they are a shade over standard.
In the balanced system described, nothing at all need be lost. If the height mean of a
22.5-inch breed should drift upward to 24 inches, it would be because most of the breeders
wanted a taller dog! Since the breed club would be advising breeders, measuring and rating
dogs, maybe even suggesting matings, this sort of gradual change would occur only with the
knowledge and acquiescence of the breed club, representing all active breeders. Under a
heterozygous plan with mainly assortative matings, nothing whatever is lost in such a gradual
change. Should the height drift upwards and, later on, the breeders decide upon a return to
the original mean, a simple shift in the emphasis of assortative mating will accomplish such
a return easily, smoothly, with no genetic loss and no disturbance of other traits.
The whole idea of a dynamically balanced heterozygous breeding system is the
retention of as much healthy genetic diversity as possible. Such diversity makes it easy for
a breed to develop and progress in whatever direction its breeders wish. It also ensures that
genetic problems are kept to a minimum no matter what changes of standard may occur. In the
statically balanced homozygous system now in force, the more homozygosity increases with
time and selective breeding, the harder it becomes for major change to occur naturally and
easily, and the more pronounced genetic problems become. Once an allele has been "fixed" in
homozygosity, no amount of selection can change that trait; only radical outcrossing can
restore the lost alleles and such outcrosses will always upset the static balance completely,
necessitating years of remedial inbreeding and selection, probably creating new genetic
problems. I am convinced that a system based on a dynamic equilibrium of healthy dominant
genes must inevitably be better than one which throws away most of the healthy genetic
diversity in order to achieve static stability for homozygous recessive traits.
It is worth noting that the new system, if carried out at all
conscientiously, would mean more work per dog for everyone. Breeders would necessarily
invest more time and effort in their breeding stock in order for it to pass breed club
requirements. This is by no means a negative factor. One ongoing problem in our society
is that of large numbers of unwanted pets. Another related problem for the purebred fancy
is substandard dogs produced by the non-serious "backyard" breeder and the puppy-mill
profiteer. The suggested reform measures would discourage exploitative factions and reduce
considerably the overall number of purebred dogs, while raising greatly the overall quality
levels and ensuring that practically all purebred dogs were valuable, cherished, and wanted
by their breeders and owners. The new system would greatly increase the inherent value of
purebred canine stock. Purebred would then mean much more than just a paper certificate!
A Canine Revolution?
THE FOREGOING PRESCRIPTIONS may sound like a canine revolution. If so, the revolution would consist mainly of integrating many facets of the fancy which now exist in ghetto isolation, or of importing good ideas from other parts of the cynological world. In Europe, for example, many breed clubs have long held responsibilities for their breeds similar to those described above. The only really revolutionary features of this new vision of purebred dogdom are the permanently open studbook and the abandonment of incest breeding, and those represent simple, inevitable acquiescence to genetic reality. If there is one thing we can do which will be of lasting benefit to the dogs we breed, it is to endow each and every one with a healthy, heterozygous genetic outfit. If that is to become possible, the closed studbook must go and inbreeding must go. There are no effective alternatives.
These reforms would require considerable co-operative effort on the part of breeders, breed clubs and the CKC in order to bring them into being. A major part of the job would be to convince Agriculture Canada of the desirability and feasibility of these proposals, followed by amendment of the Animal Pedigree Act to facilitate them. Yet when we consider the threat to the very existence of purebred dogs posed by genetic disease, the economic loss caused by genetic defects, and their widespread unhappy effect on people's lives, can we deny that radical and decisive remedial action is required? The goals of a balanced-heterozygote breeding system producing healthy, hardy dogs and a balanced breed identity structure coordinating all the delightful activities of purebred dogdom, would be worth any amount of effort. Let us begin work now to bring those goals into existence! Future generations of breeders and fanciers will be grateful to us for so doing and what is more, we shall be doing the best and kindest thing for our very best friends -- our dogs.
Continue to read Part Four: Postscript, Bibliography, Glossary and Afterword