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>she suffered a stifle injury whilst entire, not necessarily due to conformation, but a one off unlucky incident.
>I've hear numerous times that "working" gundog breeds don't have health problems, but I've also heard numerous times people who have had this "healthier" option an they've had the same health problems.
>Is it then fair to make everyone pay for testing, when actually, one gene pool remains healthy without this as a problem overall.
>Is it then fair to make everyone pay for testing, when actually, one gene pool remains healthy without this as a problem overall
> Which leads me to the question, if, by health testing, we discover a problem, is it really a problem when it hasn't caused any health problems previously? I hope that's not too daft a question, but if we health tested all cockers and found a bms of 14, so what if there is a very low incidence of actual hip problems developing with dogs?
> to hip score a whole gene pool to find out yep, they're healthy overall, seems madness to me.
>
> or you decimate your gene pool to try and eradicate a problem that a dog may or may not develop, and that isn't actually life threatening, more associated with old age.
>Even carrier to carrier will produce 75% unaffected offspring. Are you saying that a potentially 25% affected rate is acceptable?
>Just a point, affecteds can be bred from, mated to a clear and not produce anything worse than a carrier as well for some conditions.
> Perhaps we may end up breeding ourselves into a corner, and find out that a particular condition, although not nice, was better to live with in the gene pool, carefully managed, rather than close off a whole section of dogs that may have kept the breed
> but I see no point in testing for something that simply isn't a problem within a breed, and slightly back to the original question, it must be even more difficult when you have a breed with a split gene pool, where a problem arises in one side only.
> (eye tests come to mind)
> With that she used this show stud to sire litters. I was appalled. The dogs and others from these parents do not have conformation faults or illnesses but I believe temperament is just as vital to a dog/dog owner yet some breeders will knowingly overlook this to get pups sired by a winning show dog.
> what if that one problem dog found during testing is destined to be a top stud dog ? what was a rarity could very soon be come common place
> To reply to the person a couple of posts ago re things like the BVA eye cert, I do know that some people who breed Labs have now stopped renewing the eye cert for their dogs, instead, just testing for PRA. I personally think the annual eye cert should continue to be used by anyone who breeds
> Trouble is, you're heading for a genetic bottleneck in many breeds if people keep using the few 'clear' dogs when you have an apparently high proportion of carriers in the population.
>
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