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by susie on 24 August 2016 - 19:08
by fring on 24 August 2016 - 21:08

by susie on 24 August 2016 - 21:08
The more offspring, the bigger the chance to reproduce everything, sure, but unfortunately not within one individuum.
As far as I know breeders only tend to use one male and one female for breeding. ..
by fring on 24 August 2016 - 21:08
Looking at genetics there always will be a loss of 50% of genetic material within ONE generation ( DNA; 50% dam - 50% sire ), everything else is impossible. That´s no guess, that´s science.
this possible but meiosis not predicate and not predict. you very wrong about fundamental and now you make track back and be sarcastic but that not change scientific proof. also, 50/50 not right for mammal. that mendel, single cell organism theory not transfer to multifactor genetic of canine.

by bubbabooboo on 24 August 2016 - 22:08

by susie on 24 August 2016 - 22:08
Sorry, I really didn't want to sound sarcastic.
"If litter one puppy only, yes, loose 1/2. "
That's what I tried to express, nothing else, the genetically contribution of sire/dam within one son/daughter.
In case you want to get it all, you need to clone, at least that's my amateurish understanding of genetics.

by Sunsilver on 24 August 2016 - 22:08
Susie, I am considering the whole genome, not just a single individual. When breeding dogs, you have to think about stuff like that. For instance, Star has Palme 14 times in 7 generations: should I breed her to another showline dog that has the same genetics?* What would have happened if her parents had both been German showlines, heavily line bred on the same dogs? In a closed gene pool,which is what you have when dealing with purebred dogs, there are only so many ways the genetic deck can be reshuffled. The split between show line and working line has narrowed the gene pool even further...heaven forbid I should get 'shit on my gold' by outcrossing to a working line dog!
(* I am speaking of a hypothetical breeding, of course - Star is not only spayed, she is also now 9 years old.)
by lckw on 28 August 2016 - 14:08

by susie on 28 August 2016 - 17:08
Curious as I am I tried to find out more about your dog, and I found a Shih Tsu, and a comment about a dog named "Blade". Something seems to be totally scewed up ...
About your search for a puppy:
In the US breeders normally do warrant hips and elbows, sometimes ears, testicles and teeth.
Statistically these are the main problems in the breed, everything else may happen, but statistically it´s bad luck.
Personally I´d go with a breeder training and titling his own stock ( Bullinger Shepherds was a very good advice ), at least these breeders stick to the SV rules ( HD/ED, titles, show rating ), and I tend to take a look at the siblings of sire and dam ( HD/ED results ), and at the lifespan of the direct ancestors ( 2. generation ). I also ask about bloat, for me the tendency to bloat is inheritent ( not prooven, just my opinion ).
In case you do have the ability to visit a dog sport club, do it. There you will have the opportunity to see at least the potential dam, in the best case the sire and some offspring, too.
Otherwise puppies are just puppies, even the best breeder will produce a unhealthy puppy once in a while, that´s nature.
Humans can do there best, but sometimes nature is against you.
Good luck!
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