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by Naytejr on 30 October 2015 - 07:10

by Reliya on 30 October 2015 - 11:10
Either way, if the temperament isn't right, the dog shouldn't be bred to, but breeding is more than just looking at the dog presented. You've got to know what's behind the dog, too, and decide what risks you're willing to take in order to produce better offspring.
Also, I'm not a breeder. However, I'd like to become a reputable breeder one day, so I've done my homework and would know what established breeders think of my reply. :)
by gsdstudent on 30 October 2015 - 12:10

by bubbabooboo on 30 October 2015 - 16:10
Stupid questions lead to stupid answers .. If you have puppies who have seen there mother shot and killed in front of them at 8 weeks with a loud gun for instance .. all of the puppies will be warped by the experience in one way or another. Afraid of gunfire or aggressive toward people with or without guns, afraid of loud noises, or just afraid or aggressive when stressed are all possible outcomes of traumatic events in a puppy's life and upbringing. Puppies separated from their litter mates at 8 weeks and raised by stupid humans often have problems getting along with other dogs. Some things only a dog can teach a dog and puppies need their dog family just as humans do. The fact that most humans rip the litter apart at 8 weeks because it is convenient and profitable to do so does not make that practice best for the puppy. That's why raising puppies is a lot more than shoving food in their mouths and behavior is a lot more than simplistic genetics. There is nothing breed or species specific about both good and bad experiences affecting a dog or a human baby's behavior for their entire life.
by gsdstudent on 30 October 2015 - 16:10

by bubbabooboo on 30 October 2015 - 17:10
Environment is king in determining the dog's response to stress .. the environment that the sire and dam is exposed to has effects both psychological and physical for the puppies derived from a mating .. then there is the post natal effects during the first 4 months with the parents and other dogs in a family of related dogs (called a pack sometimes). Blaming everything that happens in a dog's physical and mental development on genetics is simplistic BS. A dog's personality, intelligence, and physical attributes are always a product of environment interacting with genetics.
Excerpt from a study on prenatal and epigenetic influences caused by stress in parents ( and even grandparents ) of mice.
Through the uterine environment, mothers can pass their environmental exposures on to the fetuses they are nurturing. Thus, studies looking at mechanisms of epigenetic inheritance tend to focus on fathers—pretty much all they give to the fetus is genetic material. And male mice don't need to help in rearing the young, so this genetic material can be their only contribution to the next generation. In earlier work, these scientists exposed male mice to six weeks of alternating stressors like 36 hours of constant light, a 15-minute exposure to fox odor, exposure to a novel object (marbles) overnight, 15 minutes of restraint in a 50 mL conical tube, multiple cage changes, white noise all night long, or saturated bedding. Poor little guys. Then the scientists allowed the mice to breed. Adult offspring of these chronically stressed dads had reduced hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal stress axis reactivity; when they themselves were restrained for 15 minutes, they did not make as much corticosterone as mice sired by relaxed dads. This is relevant, and problematic, because blunted stress responses in humans are associated with neuropsychiatric disorders like depression, schizophrenia, and autism.
The effects of stress are passed on to the next generation in both male and female mice. This is why how the breeder handles and nourishes the parental generation as well as how the puppies are handled and nourished influences greatly how the puppies develop both mentally and physically.

by susie on 30 October 2015 - 17:10
In case it´s that much environment we wouldn´t need to choose "our" pup out of a litter, they would be the same at the age of 8 weeks - and they definitively are not ( normal litter, normal dam, normal raising ). Within one litter you mostly are able to find both outgoing, strong pups and weaker ones ( I don´t want to call them "shy" at this point = a variation of a lot of different temperaments ). At this early age ( and given the dam wasn´t shot...) it´s genetics, environment does play a minor role. As soon as the pup is separated from the siblings ( for me at the age of eight weeks ) things become different. From now on it´s on the new owner to develop positive traits and to suppress negative traits = environment = no more nature, but nurture.
To the OP: There are no absolutes in breeding, there are only tendencies. The chance to get a strong dog out of strong parents is higher than to get a strong dog out of weak parents, but it happens. That´s the main reason why people should watch the pups they are interested in in real, and not only on paper ( that´s the reason why a dog should show proof of its working abilities later on - the likelihood to get good dogs out of good dogs is high, but not given ).

by KYLE on 30 October 2015 - 18:10
I do not believe that you should put two, soft dogs together, with the intention of producing street worthy, dual purpose police dogs. This is why the schutzhund was created. Breeding suiitability test. If you want to understand the breed look into reading as much as you can about the founder of the breed Max von Stephanitz.
http://www.nsgsdc.com/breedhistory.shtml
http://maxvstephanitz.homestead.com/mvs_breeding.html

by Naytejr on 30 October 2015 - 18:10

by bubbabooboo on 30 October 2015 - 19:10
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