Breeding images edited new

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The new brave playground of dog breeding (written for publication in the Russian-language Golden Retriever Magazine) For as long as I remember I have been interested in and loved dogs. I wanted a dog of my own even as a young child and so started to educate myself in canine matters as a schoolgirl. I have now owned dogs for more than 25 years and almost from the very beginning became involved in the world of pedigree dogs; breeding, showing and testing. I have met and talked with breeders from different countries and continents and have witnessed the change from so-called Club-based breeding (when mate selection and other breeding decicions were made by Dog Club leaders) into individual breeder decision-based activity. Working daily in a university environment teaching critical reading among other things, has had an impact on my everyday interaction in general – once one learns to notice things, that conditioning cannot be undone. Critical reviewing and reflection on your own and other people's activities, including those connected with canine ones, have become a second nature for me. The following are a number of personal concerns regarding some of the practices I witness, but which are seemingly given very little thought. That doesn’t mean I condemn and want to do away with these practices; quite the opposite – I find them useful and often necessary, however, I do feel the need to speculate upon their impact on our own activities, the short and long-term consequences for our beloved canine companions and their well-being. Under a common name – breeding images – I have listed three subjects: the way we look at dogs, their known health data, and new reproductive technologies. The world of visual images is becoming more and more overpowering: we are persistently bombarded by images in advertising, TV, and the Internet – all of which create a virtual (as opposed to real) world by which we unconsciously tend to measure or compare ourselves. Appearances and presenting an appealing image are becoming more and more important to be successful in job interviews or selling a house, not to mention in our own personal relationships. The image of a dog, in a similar way, is becoming more and more important in the game of dog breeding: at shows, in mate selection, and sales of puppies. Image and anatomical construction Breeders have a number of aims and depending on the breeder, they will have different priorities. Some want to improve their respective breed and breed dogs to their own vision of how the breed should look. Others are motivated by winning in the show ring, whilst for others the priority is to make a living. Of course, in order to breed successfully, whichever the priority of the breeder may be, they ultimately need to sell the puppies they do not keep from the litters they breed so they need to attract buyers) be they members of the general public or other breeders. So if I now step into the shoes of the puppy buyers who start ‘shopping’ for a much desired dog. They will have already formed an image of their ideal in their minds, and in order to find it, begin by browsing

Transcript of Breeding images edited new

The new brave playground of dog breeding

(written for publication in the Russian-language Golden Retriever Magazine)

For as long as I remember I have been interested in and loved dogs. I wanted a dog of my owneven as a young child and so started to educate myself in canine matters as a schoolgirl. I havenow owned dogs for more than 25 years and almost from the very beginning became involved inthe world of pedigree dogs; breeding, showing and testing. I have met and talked with breedersfrom different countries and continents and have witnessed the change from so-called Club-basedbreeding (when mate selection and other breeding decicions were made by Dog Club leaders)into individual breeder decision-based activity. Working daily in a university environmentteaching critical reading among other things, has had an impact on my everyday interaction ingeneral – once one learns to notice things, that conditioning cannot be undone. Criticalreviewing and reflection on your own and other people's activities, including those connectedwith canine ones, have become a second nature for me.

The following are a number of personal concerns regarding some of the practices I witness, butwhich are seemingly given very little thought. That doesn’t mean I condemn and want to do awaywith these practices; quite the opposite – I find them useful and often necessary, however, I dofeel the need to speculate upon their impact on our own activities, the short and long-termconsequences for our beloved canine companions and their well-being. Under a common name –breeding images – I have listed three subjects: the way we look at dogs, their known health data,and new reproductive technologies.

The world of visual images is becoming more and more overpowering: we are persistently

bombarded by images in advertising, TV, and the Internet – all of which create a virtual (as

opposed to real) world by which we unconsciously tend to measure or compare ourselves.

Appearances and presenting an appealing image are becoming more and more important to be

successful in job interviews or selling a house, not to mention in our own personal relationships.

The image of a dog, in a similar way, is becoming more and more important in the game of dog

breeding: at shows, in mate selection, and sales of puppies.

Image and anatomical construction

Breeders have a number of aims and depending on the breeder, they will have different priorities.

Some want to improve their respective breed and breed dogs to their own vision of how the breed

should look. Others are motivated by winning in the show ring, whilst for others the priority is to

make a living. Of course, in order to breed successfully, whichever the priority of the breeder may

be, they ultimately need to sell the puppies they do not keep from the litters they breed so they

need to attract buyers) be they members of the general public or other breeders. So if I now step

into the shoes of the puppy buyers who start ‘shopping’ for a much desired dog. They will have

already formed an image of their ideal in their minds, and in order to find it, begin by browsing

breeder web pages. Usually they will be attracted by images presented there; only if these are

appealing enough, will they take the time to go over the text as well. However images come first.

A webpage tells a great deal about breeders, their interests and goals. Often the top players in the

game of pedigree dogs present standardised images of dogs with their titles and achievements

together with a pedigree of names (sometimes supplemented with corresponding images),

mandatory health tests of hereditary diseases depending on the breed (in Golden Retrievers

usually positive results of eye checks, hip and perhaps elbow dysplasia). Sometimes the dog's

birth date is not mentioned, and as to the image, it is often only of the dog in profile, groomed

(and trimmed) to perfection, choreographed to stand in the most appealing stance that in normal

life the dogs rarely take. Sometimes that image is coupled with a portrait, but all these will

normally be shot in appealing or suitable surroundings. There is usually only a little text, a few

photos, if any of the dog in its regular life and practically nothing about the dog's personality,

even though personality traits are just as hereditary as physical traits.

Fig.1. Here are two images of the same dog. The first image was offered for a Golden RetrieverChampion book, but was refused. The second image was found more suitable. For me the firstdepicts more of the dog's personality than the second – especially as I know the dog.

I would like to emphasise that many of these images do not really represent the dogs fully. Even

if the images haven’t been manipulated using photo shop (for instance images can be cut and

pasted together), dogs are often posed to create a more impressive image, and the photos in turn

are often enhanced in various ways. It is interesting to study the images of the same dogs in

photos taken at random, and those that are presented by the breeder – the differences can be

telling!

These randomly taken photos or images, usually taken from a less than ideal angle, are one of the

reasons why owners or breeders tend to become very concerned about them appearing on the Net

without their knowledge and prior agreement, and why in some countries it is prohibited to take

photos at a dog show without the

owner's agreement. The dog's “market value” may be negatively affected by the appearance of

these “unsuitable” images.

One can often overhear people discussing dogs as if they were inanimate objects, rather than

living, breathing beings. “Nice angles” may mean manipulating the dog in a way that the “angles”

present the desired effect, though in actual life the angle is different.

Fig.2. Hind angulation variation of the same dog. Is the angulation good or not?

Fig. 3. The same dog. On the right side, though stacked, standing in a quite relaxed way, on the left side,the dog is “sitting” or “crouching” on the hindquarters, making the angle very sharp. This, however, isbecoming more and more accepted as an ideal angulation; however, if the dog would really have thisangle, he would be a cripple.

Fig. 4. Front angulation and view is much less noticed and discussed, despite the fact that 60% ofthe dog's weight is on the front. Below left: the dog standing freely. Right: the same dog asstacked up.

Fig. 5. Different front: sideways much less “desired” image than the image on the right of Figure4, but with stronger pasterns.

Even more often, people have forgotten the reason a breed's angulation is desired to be a

particular way, and often it is the image that counts. To provide an example I refer to the only

scientific book on dog movement, Curtis M. Brown's “Dog Locomotion and Gait Analysis”

(Hoflin Publishing 1986) in which the author claims that excessive angulation, though it is seen

as a desirable feature at dog shows, is usually detrimental to efficient locomotion, and that for the

majority of breeds (including that of Golden Retriever) correct angulation means that the front

edge of the hind paw is directly under the rear of the buttock at the time the rear pastern is

vertical, however, we can see that in show images the hind paw is much farther behind.

Fig. 6. The dog below is pictured in the show ring at the time being judged – this is the momentthe owner attempts to give the most positive impression of the dog, and thus the dog is at itssupposed “best”. It shows weak hindquarters and a narrow rear end as well as sloping topline. Ifthe leg were pulled further back, one would see how far the paw would reach.

This excessive angulation often means that the dog has weak hocks, slanting inwards, and more

and more images of Golden Retrievers present a sloping topline that is becoming more and more

similar to that of the German Shepherd. The problems that the breed has with movement, were

discussed at length in the BBC program “Pedigree Dogs Exposed”.

Even more so – what do we know of the realities behind these images? We may have seen some

of the dogs in person (usually at shows when they either are at repose or taken quickly to the ring)

conveying a completely different image to that presented in the show ring. We stack our dogs in

supposedly picturesque poses – often in an exaggerated way which denies the reality of their

everyday existence, we admire the moving images – ultra fast moving, flashy dogs. Brown

emphasises that dogs with decreased angulation compared to those that appear in idealised show

images have greater endurance while working. During the trot (by which movement is judged in

the show ring) excessive forward reach at the moment the paw is set down causes an increase in

energy consumption, and when we consider that the idea of a Golden Retriever is to be able to

work in a field as a pick up dog for hours and days in a row, energy conservation is much more

important than long stride. But it certainly presents a different image.

Fig.7. The first picture presents an image similar to that presented on web pages and inChampion books suggesting wonderful movers. The second image presents an energy saving,efficient type of movement that the dog in question can utilise for hours on end. It presents,however, a less desired image and has been penalised in the show ring for not moving so well asthe dog in the first picture.

Where emphasis is placed only on exterior image-based breeding, what this may lead to is

portrayed in the controversial BBC documentaries “Pedigree Dogs Exposed” (You can view this

on YouTube at the followingURL’s:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZMegQH1SPg or

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7RTsVfMHQk).

Even though many of the claims may be over exaggerated and distorted, it still hold up a mirror

of sorts. If we are honest with ourselves, we have to admit that tendencies do exist which, if they

become fully realised, would become a much worse nightmare than the programs suggest.

Health screening

Another aspect of “images” is health screening. Many puppy buyers nowadays have been

conditioned to check the results of health tests. Hips and elbows are diagnosed via X-ray

pictures, not via assessing the dog's movement. It is naturally, laudable that hereditary diseases

can be traced and hopefully reduced (if not eliminated) via health testing and selective breeding,

but the danger is reducing “health” to “clear” results of health tests. We are pleased when under a

lovely profile picture of a dog we see the brief text: “eyes clear, free of hip and elbow dysplasia”

(or HD (hip dysplasia) A/A; ED (elbow dysplasia) 0/0) but can health and hereditary diseases be

reduced only to these?

One of the problems is that the results of the images presented to vets are very much dependent or

the correct positioning of the dog under general anaesthesia, as well as the quality of the image

itself.

Therefore bad positioning or an image that is not clear enough may result in a diagnosis of some

degree of hip or elbow dysplasia. Another problem is that it is very subjective, and depends much

on the vet’s personal judgement. In the UK the British Veterinary Association who provide hip

scores for X-rays submitted to them, have a judging panel. The results are often subjective and it

is not rare to hear breeders complain that they have had unexpected hip scores that make little

sense when compared to previously submitted hip scores for other dogs they have bred. In fact, a

fellow breeder, Raymon Moonilall has suggested that hip and elbow scores submitted to the BVA

in the last ten years could be computerised and entered into a computer software program that

would analyze and categorise them taking total averages so that future hip and elbow scoring

submissions could simply be scanned into the system and the X-rays would be automatically

compared to previously programmed X-rays giving computer generated results and therefore

eliminating any subjectivity in hip and elbow scoring decisions.

In Estonia (though probably not just limited to this country) we have the example of a dog that

has been diagnosed with “severe hip dysplasia” (degree E/E), has then repeated the test and the

score has improved by two degrees to C/C - equivalent to “slight hip dysplasia”. However, one

must ask, which of these diagnoses is the correct one? Is the dog healthy or not? Can one expect

that the puppies bred from that dog will be healthy?

I have for a long time considered dysplasia to be over-emphasised in breeding programs. I ask -

why only hips (and now elbows) and not other joints? There are plenty of breeds that suffer more

from other dysplasia forms that are not taken into account in breeding programs or regulated. In

Great Danes, the Swedish breed club recently withdrew the requirement to carry out hip dysplasia

testing: they stated that during the 30+ years that the scheme had been running allowing breeding

from only A, B or C hips had not lowered the population's hip scores and they believe it is not the

most important health issue in the breed. Very few Great Danes have been put down due to bad

hips whereas the incidence of Great Danes dying from heart attacks when still very young (under

3 years old) is far too high.

During Soviet rule no health checks existed, but there was no question of breeding from badly or

incorrectly moving dogs. Nowadays it seems that the X-ray has gained far too much importance:

if the dog has A hips it is considered suitable for breeding even if it cannot walk properly (for

other reasons, that have nothing to do with hips), and vice versa – a bad X-ray is far too

influential even if the dog moves with ease. My own Great Dane with D hips moved with no

problems until his death when he was almost 10 years old whereas another Dane with B hips was

very narrow from behind and had movement problems even as a puppy. He died because he fell

down the stairs and tore his spleen – the fall being a direct consequence of his weak rear end.

So what is more important, an X-ray image or the actual movement? In one veterinary conference

health tests were questioned with “are we testing the conditions that really matter or are we

testing the things that are easy to test?”

So we get the hip/elbow letters and numbers but do we really understand what lies behind them?

Do we understand well enough what these letters mean?

Fig.8. X-ray images of different degrees of hip dysplasia. (Pictures from the Finnish GoldenRetriever Club. The first two on the left show “ideal” hips graded A/A followed by B/B and onthe right C/C grade hips. Do we understand the difference, and even more so – what do thesedifferences mean for the dogs quality of life?

One experienced Golden retriever breeder has said, “You can mate two low scoring Goldens

together and produce a litter with all high scores, there don't seem to be any rules on this however

hard you try You have to take the WHOLE dog not just its hips. Most dogs I have known of,

having a higher hip score, never went lame and one I remember with a total score of 72 [in

European scheme E/E-grade] was still showing at 12 years old and most judges remarked that he

showed the youngsters how to move.”

Now there is an ichyosis (flaky skin) gene test developed for Golden Retrievers that is highly

recommended to be carried out in some countries. However, there is little known about its

relation to other skin conditions, for example according to my knowledge flaky skin and hot spots

(wet eczema) do not occur in the same animal. So, while trying to outbreed ichyosis are we

inadvertently encouraging the spread of the tendency for hot spots and perhaps other undesirable

things because we have limited the gene pool too much?

Artificial insemination

Another “brave new means“ is artificial insemination. In many ways it is a remarkable thing (like

most new brave things), since it opens up so many opportunities and in theory would also widen

gene pool. The practice, however, is often somewhat more prosaic: what seems to be a good tool

for expanding the gene pool is often becoming quite the opposite: people get attached to certain

images (more than the real dog) and now the offspring of a dog with a positive image can be

obtained even in cases when travelling is complicated. Leaving that aspect aside, there is another

dimension that we often prefer not to think about. Mating is not just a mechanical matter but also

reflects the general health of dogs, their mutual match (yes, dog do fall in love and form

attachments, if they are given the chance), and even in case of healthy dogs in full peak of their

sexual prowess, “mother nature“ can sometimes step in to stop certain combinations from being

produced. Before going on, I provide couple of examples that I have experienced myself in my

more than a quarter of century of being amongst dogs.

A young, inexperienced male was presented to an experienced female who at home had attracted

other males and also indicated a willingness to mate. The young male had also demonstrated a

normal interest in females in heat, but when meeting with the female he, even though excited,

showed no inclination to mount the bitch. The latter also, though standing still, did nothing to

provoke the male, and both owners then decided to call the mating off. The male has produced

very well since, displaying perfectly normal behaviour and siring many average sized litters.

Another case is the complete opposite: a maiden bitch who was brought to an experienced male

who had sired a nice, even litter a couple of months earlier. The male, though courting a bit, was

not really interested (even though the bitch clearly encouraged him), while another male owned

by the same owner was clearly very eager, and thus the owners decided to use the other male.

The mating was immediate, both the male and the female eager and tender, resulting in a litter of

8.

What has caused these behavioural abnormalities, is not clear, but somehow it seemed that

“mother nature“ did not approve of the combination. With AI we have no idea what is good or

not, if the male is normally interested and able to perform, if the bitch is interested and willing to

become a mother. The latter is also no joke. I have seen many bitches who are difficult to mate,

and when mated have difficulties giving birth, producing small litters and/or weak puppies.

There may be a valid reason why certain combinations don't produce offspring, why certain

bitches may not be interested in males or vice versa. The brave new advances in medicine enable

to give life to puppies who in the wild would perish and thus guarantee only the survival of the

healthiest, smartest and most adaptable individuals. In dog breeding we follow the image in our

minds and often disregard those very vital points.

Images – friends or foes

It is human nature to like to win – and by concentrating on the best images, the outline of a dog,

X-rays in health testing, mere references to “temperament” (versus the more complex notion of

“personality”) – we hope to become winners in the playground of dog breeding. There is the

yearning for beauty and perfection, the yearning to be a creator and act as “God” within the limits

our existence places on us. But if our “God role play games” reduce the full three-dimensional

reality into a two-dimensional playground of images, isn't it time to pause and consider the full

implications of our games? To quote a a breeder who has “played the game” for several decades:

“What we have to remember is that basically all breeding is a gamble - more for some than

others. If you can remember most of the dogs on both sides of a pedigree then that is more of a

help as you know what you are breeding back to (this is where experience comes in). Many

superb Golden’s come from a virtually unshown bitch to a line bred dog who is not necessarily a

champion or even a top winner.”

The danger of images is that they train us to see things in certain ways and disregard others. They

“normalise” and often distort our view, and once a certain exaggeration or feature becomes

normal, there is a wish to “improve on it”, and thus breeding for even greater exaggeration.

Images are necessary when used with caution and the understanding that they never present the

whole picture. In our battles for the perfect image and with single genetic conditions we may lose

the war and with that the breed as a credible species.