The Canine Diversity
Project
The Price of
Popularity:
Popular Sires and Population Genetics |
C.A. Sharp
Consider the hypothetical case of Old Blue, Malthound extraordinaire. Blue was perfect:
Sound, healthy and smart. On week days he retrieved malt balls from dawn to dusk. On
weekends he sparkled in malt field and obedience trials as well as conformation shows,
where he baited to--you guessed it--malt balls.
Everybody had a good reason to breed to Blue, so everybody did. His descendants trotted
in his paw-prints on down through their generations. Blue died full of years and full of
honor. But what people didn't know was that Old Blue, good as he was, carried a few bad
genes. They didn't affect him, nor the vast majority of his immediate descendants. To
complicate the matter further, some of those bad genes were linked to genes for important
Malthound traits.
A few Malthounds with problems started showing up. They seemed isolated, so everyone
assumed it was "just one of those things." A few declared them "no big
deal." Those individuals usually had affected dogs. All in all, folks carried on as
usual.
Time passed. More problem dogs turned up. People made a point not to mention the
problems to others because everyone knows the stud owner always blames the bitch for the
bad tings and takes credit for the good. Stud owners knew it best to keep quiet so as not
to borrow trouble. Overall, nobody did anything to get to the bottom of the problems,
because if they were really significant, everybody would be talking about it, right?
Years passed. Old Blue had long since moldered in his grave. By now, everyone was
having problems, from big ones like cataracts, epilepsy or thyroid disease to less
specific things like poor-keepers, lack of mothering ability and short life-span.
"Where can I go to get away from this?" breeders wondered. The answer was
nowhere.
People became angry. "The responsible parties should be punished!" Breeders
who felt their programs might be implicated stonewalled. Some quietly decided to shoot,
shovel and shut-up. A few brave souls stood up and admitted their dogs had a problem and
were hounded out of the breed.
The war raged on, with owners, breeders and rescue workers flinging accusations at each
other. Meanwhile everybody carried on as always. After another decade or two the entire
Malthound breed collapsed under the weight of its accumulated genetic debris and went
extinct.
This drastic little fable is an exaggeration--but not much of one. Here's similar,
though less drastic, example from real life: There once was a Quarter Horse stallion named
Impressive. The name fit. He sired many foals who also exhibited his desired traits. But
when they and their descendants were bred to each other, those offspring sometimes died.
Impressive had been the carrier of a lethal single-gene recessive trait. No one knew it
was there until they started in-breeding on him. The situation of a single sire having
this kind of drastic genetic effect on a breed became known as the "Impressive
Syndrome."
Many species and breeds of domestic animals, including dogs, have suffered
"Impressive Syndromes" of their own. But cases like that of Impressive are only
the tip of the iceberg. A single-gene recessive becomes obvious in just a few generations.
But what about more complex traits?
This is not to say that those popular sires we so admire are bad breeding prospects.
Their many excellent traits should be utilized, but even the best of them has genes for
negative traits.
The problem is not the popular sires, but how we use them. For a century or more,
in-breeding has been the name of the game. (For the purposes of this article,
"in-breeding" refers to the breeding of dogs related to each other and therefore
includes line-breeding.) By breeding related individuals, a breeder increased his odds of
producing dogs homozygous for the traits he wanted. Homozygous individuals are much more
likely to produce those traits in the next generation.
When a male exhibits a number of positive traits and then proves his ability to produce
those traits he may become a popular sire, one that is used by almost everyone breeding
during his lifetime, and maybe beyond, thanks to frozen semen.
Since the offspring and grand-offspring and so on are good, breeders start breeding
them to each other. If the results continue to be good, additional back-crosses may be
made for generations. Sometimes a sire will be so heavily used that, decades hence,
breeders may not even be aware of how closely bred their animals are because the dog no
longer appears on their pedigrees.
This is the case in Australian Shepherds. Most show-line Aussies trace back,
repeatedly, to one or both of two full brothers: Wildhagen's Dutchman of
Flintridge and Fieldmaster of Flintridge. These, products of a
program of inbreeding, were quality individuals and top-producing sires. They are largely
responsible for the over-all quality and uniformity we see in the breed ring today--a
uniformity that did not exist before their birth nearly three decades ago.
Working lines have also seen prominent sires, but performance traits are far more
complex, genetically and because of the significant impact of environment. They are
therefore harder to fix. Performance breeders will in-breed, but are more likely to stress
behavioral traits and general soundness than pedigree and conformational minutiae. The
best working sires rarely become as ubiquitous as the best show-line sires.
Not every popular sire becomes so because of his ability to produce quality offspring.
Some have won major events or are owned by individuals with a knack for promotion. Such
dogs may prove to be wash-outs once their get is old enough to evaluate. But a lot of
breeders have been using the animal for the few years it takes to figure that out, the
damage may already have been done.
Use of even the best popular sires, by its very nature, limits the frequency of some
genes in the breed gene pool while simultaneously increasing the frequency of others.
Since sons and grandsons of popular sires tend to become popular sires the trend
continues, resulting in further decrease and even extinction of some genes while others
become homozygous throughout the breed. Some of these traits will be positive, but not all
of them.
The owners of Old Blue, the Malthound in the opening fable, and those who owned his
most immediate descendants had no idea what was happening under their noses. They were
delighted to have superior studs and even more delighted to breed them to as many good
bitches as possible.
Dog breeding and promoting is an expensive proposition. One usually winds up in the
hole. But owning a popular sire can change that. The situation looks like a winner for
everyone--the stud owner finds his financial burden reduced while breeders far and wide
get to partake of his dog's golden genes.
No one breeding dogs wants to produce sick dogs. A small minority are callous and
short-sighted enough to shrug genetic problems off as the price you pay to get winners,
but even they do their best to avoid letting it come to general attention.
We need a total re-thinking of how we utilize stud animals. No single dog, no matter
how superior, should dominate the gene pool of its breed. Owners of such sires should give
serious consideration to limiting how often that dog is used, annually, through its
lifetime and on into the future, if frozen semen is stored. The stud owner should also
look not only at the quality of the bitches being presented, but their pedigrees. How much
will the level of inbreeding be increased by a particular mating?
The bitch owner also needs to think twice about popular sires. If you breed to the stud
of the moment and everyone else is doing the same, where will you go when it comes time to
make an outcross?
Finally, the attitude toward genetic disease itself has to change. It must cease being
everyone's dirty little secret. It must cease being a brick with which we bludgeon those
with the honesty to admit it happened to them. It must become a topic of open, reasoned
discussion so owner of stud and bitch alike can make informed breeding decisions. Unless
breeders and owners re-think their long-term goals and how they react to hereditary
problems, the situation will only get worse.
C.A. Sharp is editor of the "Double Helix Network News". This article
appeared in Vol. IV, No. 3 (Summer 1998). It may be reprinted providing it is not altered
and appropriate credit is given.
August 18, 1998