This article originally appeared in Dog News and is published here by permission of the author.
Is Your Breed “Vulnerable”?
Carlotta Cooper
The Kennel Club in
Britain recently released their 2013 registration information,
including breed figures. For those of us with breeds with smaller
registration numbers, even in the U.S., it's refreshing to see this
kind of information. I have a breed (English Setters) that's been
hovering around the “vulnerable” mark in Britain – that is, a
native British breed with fewer than 300 individuals registered per
year. English Setters grew from 312 puppies registered in 2012 to 326
registered in 2013. Pop the champagne! It's certainly too soon to
celebrate but just a couple of years ago the breed only registered
234 puppies after a decade of decline. And the English Setter is by
no means as bad off as some of the other native breeds. You can see
registration numbers for the breeds registered in the UK here, along
with their 2012 numbers.
Total Kennel Club
registration figures for 2013 were 223,770. That's 5,460 fewer than
in 2012 which represents a 2 percent drop, though Kennel Club
officials note that the last quarter of the year showed a slight
recovery in numbers. The three most popular breeds in Britain remain
the same as in 2012, though with slightly reduced numbers: Labrador
Retrievers, Cocker Spaniels (English, to us), and the English
Springer Spaniel. You should keep in mind that the United Kingdom is
a nation of some 63 million people when looking at their numbers –
about one-fifth the population of the United States at 313 million
people.
Vulnerable breeds,
overall, increased their registrations by about 2 percent. However,
some vulnerable breeds continue to struggle. Registrations for the
Skye Terrier, for example, fell by 59 percent last year with the
breed registering only 17 puppies.
Unfortunately, we
currently have little idea what the individual breed figures are for
our breeds here in the U.S. Per Alan Kalter's recent Chairman's
Report, the AKC registered 479,404 dogs in 2013, but I haven't seen
an individual breakdown of the breeds. I think we all know that there
are plenty of pressures on breeders and buyers today which are
responsible for the drop in registrations. We have a heavy push from
animal shelters for people to get a mixed breed dog instead of buying
a purebred puppy. Animal rights people talk trash about dog breeders
and purebred dogs at every opportunity. It's more expensive to breed
and show dogs today. New laws make it harder and harder to keep and
raise dogs. There is lots of social pressure on dog owners to spay
and neuter puppies as soon as possible instead of thinking about
breeding a litter at some point. We're living in a different world
than the one that existed in 1992 when AKC registered 1.5 million
dogs.
Since we are living in
a different world today, we need to get rid of the old playbook,
especially those of us who have “vulnerable” breeds. We may not
have the same kennel club-sanctioned program here in the U.S. that
exists in Britain, but there are certainly breeds here which have to
be cognizant of the fact that we don't register many dogs each year
and we have a small gene pool. That's why it would be so helpful if
AKC would once again start posting the breed registration statistics
– both the litters and individual dogs registered. If the AKC is
now registering one-third of the dogs that they registered in 1992,
it means that the individual breed numbers are also down. We need to
know what those numbers are so we can take action. There are many
people in each breed who won't take these issues seriously until they
see how low the numbers in their breed have gotten in the last few
years.
Your Flat-Coated
Flugelhound may still be ranked 54th in the registration
rankings but
that tells you nothing about how many litters are born or how many
dogs are registered. Your breed might be on the verge of extinction
and you wouldn't know it.
Now,
according to the old playbook, we, as “responsible breeders” sold
puppies on limited registration or with spay/neuter contracts. We did
not breed every puppy in a litter. We didn't have to because there
were lots of puppies being produced and we could pick and choose.
Even as more and more health and genetic tests became available, we
could toss out any dog who had the slightest problem we didn't like.
And you know what happened? We now have fewer and fewer dogs being
bred and fewer puppies being registered.
I
think, when we see those individual breed statistics again, we will
find that many breeds are looking at low numbers. If we want to save
our breeds, we have to change our thinking and our tactics.
- No more spay/neuter contracts unless a puppy has a serious fault.
- Encourage your puppy buyers to consider breeding their puppy when s/he's an adult. Become a mentor to them.
- Try to use more dogs and bitches in each litter for breeding.
- Don't remove dogs from your breeding program for small problems. Weigh and consider pros and cons of health issues.
- Learn more about genetics and good breeding practices in general.
I'm
not saying to produce a lot of mutts or become a puppy farmer. I'm
not telling you to lower your standards. And I'm not saying that you
shouldn't health test your dogs. What I am saying is that these
suggestions can help breeds who have lower numbers. Include more
puppy buyers in your future breeding plans and more dogs in the gene
pool and it can help increase the number of dogs bred as well as the
overall health of the breed. This isn't something that I thought of
all by myself. Some of these ideas come from population genetics.
It's good to use more dogs and bitches in the gene pool; and it's
good to keep individuals in the gene pool if they don't have major
problems and you use them sparingly. Most of all, you want to breed
more instead of less. If we don't do some of the things recommended
here for breeds with low numbers, then at some point in the future it
might become necessary to use outcross breeding to try to save
various breeds. I don't think that's something that most breeders of
purebred dogs look forward to with pleasure.
I
think it would be great if AKC would do something to encourage
breeders with some of the breeds with low numbers but they would have
to identify them first. Maybe they could reduce the price of
registering a litter by a few dollars or give a breeder/owner some
recognition for persevering with these breeds – it's really not
easy finding majors when you have a breed with such low numbers!
(Especially if you live in the middle of nowhere, as I do.) We need
to keep these breeders and owners involved with their breeds or they
will be doomed to extinction.
I
know these ideas go against the grain for many breeders. They are
contrary to popular thought today that encourages people to
spay/neuter every dog and breed very little. But if we want to keep a
lot of our breeds around, we need to take actions like these. If you
love your breed and you want to make them less vulnerable, keep
breeding, despite all the obstacles. Their futures are in our hands
and we have to make sure we leave them strong and healthy for the
next generation.
Now,
if we can just see those breed statistics.
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