Two Methods Have of Breeding Have Been Adopted
The method of introducing an outcross to impart new blood, new
strength, new character; and the method of inbreeding to retain an
approved type. An outcross is introduced when the breed operated
upon is declining in stamina or is in danger of extinction, or when some
new physical or mental quality is desired.
New types and eccentricities are hardly wanted, however, and the extreme
requirements of an outcross may nowadays be achieved by the simple process
of selecting individuals from differing strains of the same breed, mating a bitch
which lacks the required points with a dog in whose family they are
prominently and consistently present.
Inbreeding is the reverse of outcrossing. It is the practice of mating
animals closely related to each other, and it is, within limits, an
entirely justifiable means of preserving and intensifying family
characteristics. It is a law in zoology that an animal cannot transmit
a quality which it does not itself innately possess, or which none of
its progenitors has ever possessed.
By mating a dog and a bitch of the same family, therefore, you concentrate
and enhance the uniform inheritable qualities into one line instead of two,
and you reduce the number of possibly heterogeneous ancestors by exactly a half right
back to the very beginning. There is no surer way of maintaining
uniformity of type, and an examination of the extended pedigree of
almost any famous dog will show how commonly inbreeding is practised.
Inbreeding is certainly advantageous when managed with judgment and
discreet selection, but it has its disadvantages also, for it is to be
remembered that faults and blemishes are inherited as well as merits,
and that the faults have a way of asserting themselves with annoying persistency.
Furthermore, breeding between animals closely allied in
parentage is prone to lead to degeneracy, physical weakness, and
mental stupidity, while impotence and sterility are frequent
concomitants, and none but experienced breeders should attempt so
hazardous an experiment. Observation has proved that the union of
father with daughter and mother with son is preferable to an alliance
between brother and sister.
Perhaps the best union is that between cousins. For the preservation of
general type, however, it ought to be sufficient to keep to one strain and
to select from that strain members who, while exhibiting similar characteristics,
are not actually too closely allied in consanguinity. To move perpetually from
one strain to another is only to court an undesirable confusion of type.
In founding a kennel it is advisable to begin with the possession of a
bitch. As a companion the female is to be preferred to the male; she
is not less affectionate and faithful, and she is usually much cleaner
in her habits in the house.
If it is intended to breed by her, she should be very carefully chosen and
proved to be free from any serious fault or predisposition to disease. Not only
should her written pedigree be scrupulously scrutinised, but her own constitution and
that of her parents on both sides should be minutely inquired into.
A bitch comes into season for breeding twice in a year; the first time
when she is reaching maturity, usually at the age of from seven to ten
months. Her condition will readily be discerned by the fact of an
increased attentiveness of the opposite sex and the appearance of a
mucous discharge from the vagina.
She should then be carefully protected from the gallantry of suitors. Dogs
kept in the near neighbourhood of a bitch on heat, who is not accessible to them, go
off their feed and suffer in condition. With most breeds it is unwise
to put a bitch to stud before she is eighteen months old, but Mr.
Stubbs recommends that a Bull bitch should be allowed to breed at her
first heat, while her body retains the flexibility of youth; and there
is no doubt that with regard to the Bulldog great mortality occurs in
attempting to breed from maiden bitches exceeding three years old.
In almost all breeds it is the case that the first three litters are the
best. It is accordingly important that a proper mating should be
considered at the outset, and a prospective sire selected either
through the medium of stud advertisements or by private arrangement
with the owner of the desired dog.
For the payment of the requisite stud fee, varying from a guinea to ten or
fifteen pounds, the services of the best dogs of the particular breed can
usually be secured. It is customary for the bitch to be the visitor, and it is well that her
visit should extend to two or three days at the least.
When possible a responsible person should accompany her.
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