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by Baerenfangs Erbe on 27 January 2019 - 14:01
The majority will correct itself but then there are dogs who won't. I think if you have a schooled eye you can tell the difference from the beginning. I've seen a lot of overbites in BYB bred dogs that won't ever correct themselves and developed a good eye for those that will and those that won't. Usually those that won't don't have a very well developed and strong jaw to begin with.

by Ryanhaus on 27 January 2019 - 18:01
I breed GSD's and Labrador Retrievers and years back I had a litter of Shepherds and
a litter of Labs whelped a couple of days apart, I had 2 shepherd pups with considerable overbites,
and a lab pup with an overbite, I had never attributed it to being inherited, I had never had
any bite problems in both breeds, and the shepherd pups were a repeat breeding.
I ended up changing the brand of kibble I was feeding, and to this day have never had
another problem with bites, feeding the wrong food can mess with genetics also...... ;)

by Koots on 27 January 2019 - 18:01
feeding the wrong food can mess with genetics also...... ;)
Sorry, but I feel that this statement is not correct.
I believe that poor food can mess with physical development (including tooth/jaw), which could result in bite issues, but food cannot change anything that is genetically hardwired, like missing teeth.

by Hundmutter on 27 January 2019 - 20:01
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