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Thread: Article about inbreeding in UK

  1. #1
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    Default Article about inbreeding in UK

    I took this from another board:

    Found an intersting post on Facebook from Norman Epstein about inbreeding of dog breeds in the UK. I thought it is food for thougths.

    BREAKING NEWS: a quarter of UK dog breeds so inbred they could face extinction (Taken from the Pedigree Exposed Blog)
    Posted: 22 Sep 2015 02:38 AM PDT
    The Kennel Club today releases data which shows that half of all Kennel Club breeds are in trouble - and a quarter of them are so genetically impoverished they may not survive.
    Those in peril include much loved UK breeds such as Irish and English Setters, the English Springer Spaniel, Cocker Spaniel, Bull Terrier, Otterhound, Bearded Collie and the Yorkshire Terrier.
    Now this is not what those attending a press conference at the Kennel Club today (Tuesday 22nd September) will be told by KC spin doctors.
    But it's what the data actually show.
    Nope, those attending the event will be told how bloody marvellous the KC is for exploring the population structure of their 200-or so breeds and that the future is looking rosier for many breeds. Significantly, they will be told that the rate of inbreeding they've found is "sustainable", implying all is well in the world of pedigree dogs. Because that, you see, is the conclusion of the authors (being paid by the Kennel Club incidentally) of a new paper published in Canine Genetics & Epidemiology this week. (Read it here.)
    Nothing could be further from the truth - and the evidence presented in the paper does not support its conclusion.
    All this new paper shows is that the rate of inbreeding in the UK has slowed a bit in recent years in some breeds - probably due to the relaxation in quarantine rules which has allowed more imports, and a greater general awareness of the damage caused by inbreeding in the wake of Pedigree Dogs Exposed.
    While this is a bit of good news, the overall picture is bleak. Many breeds are very inbred and many breeds suffer a high burden of genetic disease. The paper documents a horrific leaching of genetic diversity in the 1980s and 1990s and not even a slowing down of the rate of inbreeding in recent years is going to claw that back.
    That's because Kennel Club breeds are trapped in closed gene pools, treated as isolated species by breeders. Many KC breeds are founded on just a handful of founders - sometimes even just two dogs. The whole thing could be ameliorated with some judicious crossing to other breeds. But all but the most enlightened breeders view mating one breed to a different one as an anathema. Breed purity is still everything to most.
    This paper looks at the rate of inbreeding in 200 or so Kennel Club breeds in the UK to establish what's called their "effective population size" - a measure of genetic viability used by conservationists managing small populations. The higher the EPS (or "Ne" as population geneticists call it), the better.
    Conservationists consider an EPS of below 100 to be an indication that a population is endangered. Anything under 50 is considered genetically unsustainable - at "imminent risk of extinction" according to Franklin (1980). In fact, some modern conservationists argue that an effective population size of 100 should be considered an extinction risk and anything below 500 is a concern e.g. here)
    And yet 55 per cent of KC breeds in this new study have an effective population size of less than 100 - and 24%, almost a quarter, are under 50.
    Over at the Institute of Canine Biology, Carol Beuchat has helpfully produced a graph showing how the breeds with more than registrations a year shape up according to this paper. If you take the conservative estimate that a minimum effective population size of 500 is needed to ensure sustainability, only two breeds make the grade. (Read Carol's take on this paper here.)
    The true picture could be even worse. This is because the data include imported dogs for which only limited pedigree data is available. This will make the picture look rosier than it really as apparently unrelated imported dogs will often be quite closely related if you go a little further back in the pedigree.
    Of course, this data looks only at UK breeds and the global situation could be better. Certainly, while the English Setter is on its last legs in the UK, there are zillions of them globally which may offer a way out of the genetic cul-de-sac. But this is not true for every breed.
    Now the degree of threat to individual breeds will depend largely on the disease burden in those breeds - and that varies considerably. Some breeds with very small populations appear to be relatively healthy; while some much large breeds are not. I hope today that the Kennel Club is going to announce some kind of coherent conservation plan for all breeds to help manage the genetics.
    This paper is a great opportunity to highlight that so much more needs to be done and the attempt at positive spin by the Kennel Club is a great disservice to dogs.
    The 29 breeds in the UK facing extinction (all with an effective population size under 50)
    Airedale Terrier
    Bearded Collie
    Bedlington Terrier
    Boston Terrier
    Bull Terrier
    Rough Collie
    Long-haired Dachshund
    English Setter
    Wire-haired Fox Terrier
    Irish Red and White Setter
    Irish Setter
    Kerry Blue Terrier
    King Charles Spaniel
    Lakeland Terrier
    Lancashire Heeler
    Lowchen Little Lion Dog
    Manchester Terrier
    Norfolk Terrier
    Norwich Terrier
    Curly-coated Retriever
    Clumber Spaniel
    Cocker Spaniel
    English Springer Spaniel
    Field Spaniel
    Sussex Spaniel
    Welsh Springer Spaniel
    Tibetan Spaniel
    Welsh Terrier
    Yorkshire Terrier
    There is no panic at all about this in this paper. And yet a supporting infographic produced by the Kennel Club actually makes it pretty clear.


    Link to the article: Genetic status of purebred dogs in the UK - The Institute of Canine Biology
    Rick

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  3. #2
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    Thanks Rick ,very good read !

  4. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by last5oh_302 View Post


    All this new paper shows is that the rate of inbreeding in the UK has slowed a bit in recent years in some breeds - probably due to the relaxation in quarantine rules which has allowed more imports, and a greater general awareness of the damage caused by inbreeding in the wake of Pedigree Dogs Exposed.
    You could say the same about the Royal family....they were becoming so inbreed that they were forced to 'court' women outside the 'Blue Blood' gene pools

    Good article, but no shocking revelations.

  5. #4
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    it's a typical blog entry, opinionated and unsubstantiated. Things are changing very very rapidly in genetic research. Quoting 1980 research (the only quote) is dubious. I don't like what xKC are doing with a lot of dogs, but that's another story.
    "The dog is Small Munsterlander, the gun is Beretta."
    "You become responsible, forever, for what you have tamed" A. Saint-Exupery.

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