Again Mike.. I agree.. but I didn't buy this dog from a backyard breeder. these people don't breed for profit.. they bred this littler to keep the genetics of Del Lupo Nero and Von Den Wolfen alive in canada.
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Again Mike.. I agree.. but I didn't buy this dog from a backyard breeder. these people don't breed for profit.. they bred this littler to keep the genetics of Del Lupo Nero and Von Den Wolfen alive in canada.
When we talk about one breed or another testing higher for aggression, we are of course talking about an average. There is a fair amount of variation within the breed(s) also.
I posted a link in the main dog forum a little while back to a paper on variability in impulsivity in working vs. non-working border collies as compared to Labs, which speaks to your point. The same trend for Labs to be less impulsive than BCs is seen in non-working and working lines, but within-breed variability in non-working lines is large enough to make the difference statistically irrelevant. In working lines the variability is minimal and so the difference in impulsivity is clear. Breeding makes a significant difference.
Realized that after posting.. but unless it comes from germany with a schutzhund title and working lines with a SG/V rating from the WUSV.. It means absolutely nothing to me.