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by Blitzen on 07 December 2012 - 18:12

by J Basler on 07 December 2012 - 18:12
I AM GOING TO STILL TEST BECAUSE WE HAVE TO PUT OUR TRUST IN THE SYSTEM.
IT'S A BIG JOURNEY CAN WE HANDLE IT, WITH THE FIRST STEP.
by joanro on 07 December 2012 - 19:12
Maybe they should change their name, call it the DNA data bank.

by marjorie on 07 December 2012 - 20:12
by Blitzen on 07 December 2012 - 20:12

by Prager on 07 December 2012 - 21:12
The companies doing this testing are indirectly but consciously scaring living daylights out of breeders and buyers into testing with pages which look like this. Is this just fear mongering people into spending money or do they really care?
Below is from this www:
http://www.dogenes.com/
HOW YOU CAN HELP ? |
1. Breeders |
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Be aware of the basic principles of genetics as they apply to breeding.
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Make sure that you are aware of the genetic disorders in your breed and how to recognize them.
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Don't be reluctant to disclose a possible genetic disorder in your kennel. Hiding this information may damage your reputation if at a later date a genetic disorder becomes widespread in your breed.
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Keep in touch with your puppy owners, and encourage them to report any health problems with the puppies that you have bred. Also you should know if the puppies are in overall good health.
- Seek help from the research community. If you can provide DNA samples, or bank DNA this will help your breed in the future.
2. Owners |
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Know the breed that you own, what possible genetic disorders are in that breed, and how to recognize them.
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Any problems with your puppy should be reported to the breeder, along with any test results and clinical information that your veterinarian has provided. Often this data is lost, and could contribute the the future health of dogs
- Seek help from the research community. If you can provide DNA samples, or bank DNA this will help your breed in the future.
3. Everyone |
Communicate with each other!
by joanro on 07 December 2012 - 21:12

by marjorie on 07 December 2012 - 21:12
I, personally, would purchase a dog from a breeder who is open about health problems but run from one who claims they never had a problem in their lines. EVERYONE who breeds wil eventually come up against a health problem- no such thing as a perfect dog- dogs get sick and die just as people do. My sticking point is breeders who refuse to tell you what their dogs passed from. I have ZERO respect for them. Anyone who would have you believe that all their dogs died peacefully in their sleep at 16 years of age is full of s*it.

by Prager on 09 December 2012 - 02:12
Also
now there are just few DNA tests. But this is big business and going to be bigger business. Thus eventually there will be thousands of tests for thousands of hideous diseases which are genetically detectable and we all would like to eliminate them. Some of these are present in all dogs. Which tests are you going to do so that people will not stone you on Internet and call you irresponsible breeder because you did not run this or that test? What are you going to do when you discover that no dog will be able to pass all those tests?

by marjorie on 09 December 2012 - 03:12
As I said in my previous post- each breeder or purchaser will have to pick their own poison to either breed away from, or run from, when making a purchase. I meant to say lines, in my above post- not individual dogs.
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