1067 OUR THREATENED BREEDS OUR THREATENED BREEDS It is reassuring, if you like dogs, to think that in 2099 AD the same pedigree breeds of dog will be around as those of 1999. These breeds are, apart from some comparatively recent importations like the Chinese Shar Pei, the Dutch Kooikerhondje, the Nova Scotia Duck-tolling Retriever, the Italian Spinone, the Japanese Akita and the range of German pointer-retrievers, very similar in name to the breeds displayed at the early dog shows at the end of the 19th century. Breeds like our native Spaniel breeds, our Pointer, our Fox Terrier, our Rough Collie and the Mastiff have become part of our heritage, symbols almost of the stability of our nation. We may have made the Bulldog less athletic, the English Toy Terrier too minute, the Bloodhound's head too loose-skinned, the Basset Hound too exaggerated and the Clumber Spaniel too heavily-boned, but it is unthinkable for breeds like these not to be with us at some stage in the future. Or is it? I believe that our breeds of domestic dog are in unprecedented danger, not from one single distinct threat and not next year or the one after, but from a multiplicity of menaces over the next two decades. Some breeds, from right across the KC's Groups: Gundog, Pastoral, Terrier, Hound, Utility, Toy and Working, are now classified as either vulnerable or 'at watch' because of lack of numbers. Already there is concern over their immediate future. Their registrations in 2016 reveal the cause of this concern: only 40 Otterhounds, 53 Bloodhounds, 28 Skye Terriers, 49 Sussex Spaniels, 89 Smooth Collies, 83 Curly-coated Retrievers and 80 Field Spaniels; each is now an endangered species. Some breeds too are vulnerable, not because of falling numbers, but through genetic defects increasingly affecting their quality and length of life. Unlike some countries, Denmark, Portugal, South Korea and Japan for example, we lack a society devoted to the perpetuation of our threatened native breeds of dog, unlike the much-admired Rare Breeds Trust for farm animals. We have already lost the English White Terrier, the Smithfield Sheepdog, the Glenwherry Collie, the Welsh Hillman and the Llanidloes Setter and, in the past, only just saved the Irish Wolfhound, the Mastiff, the Field Spaniel and the Lancashire Heeler, the last-named only attracting 90 new registrations in 2016.
Paradoxically, another serious threat comes from the unwise over-breeding of certain over-popular breeds: Labradors (33,000 registered annually), Pugs (10,000) and French Bulldogs (21,000). I don't recall seeing as many badly bred specimens in these breeds as I did at the end of the last century. Too many under-standard bitches are being bred from; too many faulty or weedy pups are being retained. Public taste, sadly so often affected by 'celebrity ownership' swings from the Yorkie, the Westie, the Goldie and the Sheltie to temporarily-'fashionable' breeds like the Pug and French Bulldog. This encourages commercial breeders, with literally thousands coming in from overseas puppy-farms each year. This is a lack of wisdom from the general public and no fault of any kennel club. Breeder/fancier whim plays its part too. The construction of the German Shepherd Dog now might well deserve adverse comment from the Prince of Wales! Far too many are built unwisely in the modern style, will not stand the test of time and are certainly not traditional. Why should a breed that had an extolled level top-line when introduced to this country a century ago now require a lamentable roach back or the extended hindquarters of a cat? Why does a lovely breed like the Labrador need the head of a Rottweiler - often with hard cruel eyes, and, in the once rightly-named yellow variety, any old off-white, biscuit or caramel coat colour? Why should the Yorkshire Terrier, once a famed ratter, become an animated tea-cosy? Does it suit the dog? The physically beautiful Golden Retriever is no longer golden but a washed-out off-white colour. The workmanlike Dobermann, purpose-bred by a skilful breeder, now comes in such a variety of temperaments that any family wishing to own one should choose the breeder and the line very carefully indeed.
Meanwhile unspoiled breeds like the impressive Beauceron from France, the handsome Dutch gundog breeds, the imposing Leonberger from Germany, the attractive Broholmer from Denmark and the appealing Canaan Dog from Israel go unrecognised for what they are: sound, unexaggerated, usually well bred dogs. One day one wealthy dog-lover will leave a foundation-grant to some hyper-active publicity-agency to plug the good breeds and question those spoiled by man's misdirected whims or unadmitted ignorance! On this subject, money left to animal welfare charities is just not being made best use of, perhaps because it attracts few newspaper headlines. There is sufficient material to keep one very busy. When I see totally-unsound Mastiffs, Bulldogs and King Charles Spaniels being clapped when they win at KC show (or indeed World Dog Shows) then I realise the limitations of KC-governance - in every developed country. In those breeds of dog favoured as companion dogs, temperament must come first. Statistics indicate that a quarter of our pet dogs are abandoned or put down because of unwanted misbehaviour. In a study recently conducted in America, 40% of pet owners considered at one time getting rid of their dog because of its temperament. The now massive numbers of inherited mental and physical problems in pure-bred dogs bring not just large veterinary bills but also great discomfort to the dogs and great distress to their owners. Sound breeds like the Welsh Springer Spaniel, the Manchester Terrier, the Irish Red and White Setter and the Smooth Fox Terrier are just not attracting the public support they deserve.
I strongly support the view once expressed by four veterinary scientists at the Ontario Veterinary College which read: "The advantages of hybrid vigour in a pure-bred line could be realised in a carefully controlled breeding program making use of outcrosses." The American veterinary surgeon Leon Whitney found fifty years ago better disease resistance in his crosses between two pedigree breeds. Also in north America, a study by Scott and Fuller (1964) indicated that the high puppy mortality characteristic of matings within a breed was greatly reduced when two different breeds were crossed. Another study by Rehfeld (1970) showed that the frequency of neonatal death in pure-bred Beagles increased with the degree of inbreeding. Most pedigree dog breeders resort to close line-breeding when they realise that such a programme is more likely to produce uniform animals of predictable merit. Then to their dismay, a few animals having recessive disorders begin appearing in the line-bred progeny. When the first abnormal puppy is born, the initial reaction is to deny that anything heritable is at fault in their line. It is regarded as a freak and the puppy disposed of. When further abnormal births occur, the cover up continues. The veterinary profession and geneticists know well that in-breeding is usually accompanied by an increase in defects: smaller litter sizes, increased post-natal mortality, general lessening of body size, lower reproductive performance, less robustness and behavioural problems. It is not inbreeding per se which brings about these defects but the presence of deleterious recessive genes which are being carried in the stock. Yet it is consistently argued by pedigree dog breeders, and regrettably even by some with veterinary training, that our pedigree breeds of dog are just as healthy, virile and robust as any cross-bred dog, mongrel or mutt. This is in spite of the weight of empirical evidence, especially from north America, over the last fifty years in particular. There are of course plenty of perfectly healthy pedigree dogs and far too many ill-kept mongrels and pitiful pi-dogs in the world. It is in the area of planned dog breeding where action can and must be taken to conserve the famous breeds handed down to us. I can understand bigger breeds like the Scottish Deerhound and the Otterhound not being suitable household pets, but many of the large breeds have found favour with the owners with the space to accommodate them; nearly a thousand Great Danes were newly registered in 2016, against only 209 Deerhounds. It is significant that very old breeds such as the Saluki, the Pekingese and the Basenji only rarely express a severe genetic abnormality and then probably from a new mutation. Breeders of past centuries would never have tolerated the flawed stock which we strive to justify today. Another ancient breed, the standard Poodle, has been highly but skilfully and successfully inbred and now possesses a relatively clean genotype. Younger breeds, some with ancient origins but lacking the distinct physical identity of the Saluki, the Pekingese and the Basenji, seem to carry a high content of genetic 'junk' and breeders need the help of informed geneticists in planning their breeding programmes. There are two bodies which could take action more or less immediately to control the inheritance of genetic defects. The registration of pedigree dogs in Britain is the self-appointed task of the Kennel Club, which also officially authenticates all breed clubs. If identified carriers of inheritable diseases were refused entry to the KC stud book, a dramatic advance could be made. And if veterinary surgeons declined to remedy umbilical hernias, patella luxations, entropian, etc., unless the patient was concurrently speyed or castrated, another equally dramatic advance could be achieved. There are signs that each could happen one day but the impetus, most noticeably, is not coming from the top. There is surely an Alice-in-Wonderland situation in dogdom when dogs bred accidentally or by intentional cross-breeding, (as with lurchers and working terriers), can be more robust and sounder, mentally and physically, than many of those bred to a written blueprint by experienced and sometimes wealthy breeders. But when you breed, deliberately, for great size, crooked legs, long backs, soppy looks, loose skin, absurdly short legs, prominent eyes, rugger-ball shaped heads, diamond eyes, anteater skulls and needlessly long coats, you also breed for physical unsoundness. When you ignore problems of temperament or known inherited defects in your breeding stock, you are knowingly and wickedly producing sick dogs. This is essentially a moral dilemma; but those in authority and scientists in general are the last people to solve moral issues. Historically, it always takes one tough-minded, absolutely dedicated and utterly resolute individual, usually dubbed a trouble-maker, an odd-ball or an eccentric to step forward and put such matters right. Nowadays it probably needs a woman! In Britain, inspired campaigners like Beverley Cuddy, editor and publisher of that enlightened monthly magazine Dogs Today and TV producers like Jemima Harrison, who produced that ground-changing documentary Pedigree Dogs Exposed, have achieved more in their fields of influence than any wealthy animal charity; they deserve medals ahead of so many being rewarded. I would strongly support an MBE for each of them.
I believe that pedigree dog breeders, not all but far too many, have lost their way. Why stick to a closed gene pool when it produces unsound stock? Breeders of French hounds of the chase have always sought the best blend. Our hunting Basset people have out-crossed to the Harrier in pursuit of a better hound. Edwin Brough is revered as the developer of the modern Bloodhound but he insisted on an outcross in every fifth generation. Graham in re-creating the Irish Wolfhound, Moseley in stabilising the Bullmastiff, Van Rooyen in developing the Rhodesian Ridgeback, Edwardes in breeding the Sealyham, Korthals in evolving his pointing griffon and Dobermann in producing his Pinscher, bred from the best ingredients they could get, with no slavish regard for pedigree, to give us some of our finest breeds of today.
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