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Influencing Factors in Dog Breeding
from:The comparative influences of heredity and environment and their
respective importance to the organism is a question that has
been debated time out of mind. It is, however, a question
unworthy of debate. No living organism is without heredity, else
it would not be a living organism. It is never without
environment at least partly conducive to its survival, else it
would die. However well or ill a dog is to be reared and cared
for, a prerequisite is that he must be bred and born. So bred
and born, he has a heredity. This heredity is but the
configuration of the genes that form the zygote. That heredity,
expressing itself in a favorable environment, determines what
the organism will become.
If the complex of genes is the pattern for a Chihuahua, no
possible environment can turn it into a Great Dane; if the genes
are those of a Greyhound, no food, grooming, or exercise, care
or medication, can cause them to produce a Bulldog.
If a dog be genetically patterned for mediocrity or less, no
environment can make him excellent. The converse, however, is
not true. A dog may have an excellent heredity and be bred and
born to be a great dog, only to have his excellence fail of its
fruition through neglect, incorrect food, disease, or some other
environmental factor.
He may be starved or stunted or made rachitic or crippled,
deformed or even killed. There is no denying the effect
environment may have upon the dog. This is no effort to belittle
its influence. The care that is given him, the food he eats, the
security of his housing, the very kindness or disdain with which
he is treated may make him or mar him, assuming that the
potentiality for excellence is in his germ plasma .
But no power on earth can make him better than his genes
determine that he shall be. He must be well born before he can
be well reared. The breeding comes first. The Dalmatian does not
change his spots, nor the Mexican Hairless his hide.
Heredity is in the long run but the genetic environment of the
variety. Only as certain genes existed in the ancestors and were
transmitted through them to the organism is heredity possible;
and the pre-natal environment of the fetus in the dam's uterus
is quite as determining of the dog's fate as any similar period
of his post-natal life.
He may be starved or injured or killed before he is born.
Whatever may happen to him after the gametes fuse to form the
zygote is chargeable to his environment. The heredity is in the
two haploid sets of chromosomes, with their attendant genes,
that unite to form the zygote.
It is a waste of time and effort to rear and care for dogs so
ill bred that even with an optimum environment they have no
possibility of development into representative specimens of
their variety. It is equally a waste of time and effort to breed
fine animals only to have them ruined in the rearing.
The work of producing a fine dog is only half done when the
right parents are bred together to produce him. The other half
is in the rearing and development of what has been well bred. If
the breeding has been injudicious, the good care is futile.
The correct rearing of a dog involves very largely the exercise
of that rare quality known as common sense. Only ordinary
intelligence is required. Well nigh anybody should be able to
rear a dog if only he does not neglect or postpone the things
which are all but self-evidently needful to be done.
The rearing and care of a dog involves primarily an adequate
ration of food suitable to a carnivore and a supply of fresh
water. It includes fit shelter and quarters. It involves the
freeing of the animal from internal and external parasites,
cleaning, grooming, exercise, training, and companionship; all
of which are parts of the dog's environment. When this has been
carried out, the fine animal can reveal himself.
About the author: Jimmy Cox
Long Lost Manuscript Resurfaces Revealing Everything You Ever
Wanted To Know About How To Breed Dogs So That You'll Get The
Best Bloodline Ever!
Click Here For Free Online Ebook http://www.dogbreedpicture.org/
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