Well said

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Joyce mccarthy
Sent: Saturday, November 06, 2010 1:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Fw: merle / Read this article on Merle chi's




Well said Jacqueline...As any color or breeds there is going to be
issues..Be bad patellas or or back's..Old school vet's would say it's caused
from constant jumping the toy breeds do now it's bad knees from bad
breedings...I think both can hold true and would agree that parents should
stop being bred..If several from the same had issues..But I know my merles
are my pride n joy as any of my fur kids are...They might be breeders but
there my babies...


On Sat, Nov 6, 2010 at 1:07 PM, Jacqueline Crawley-Ewing
<[email protected]> wrote:


  



I read it too & the other ones.  Basically you have to watch the Merle when
you breed.  2 Merles [including one that is 'hidden' visually - you can't
see the spots] create eye, ear and other problems.  You need to know if your
dog is carrying the Merle gene.

I think most dog issues stem from 'fancy' style breeding with no real
understanding in genetics.  The genes and DNA that make a trait are very
hard to define - lots of combinations which of course is how we [& nature]
have created variations in the first place.  In nature, when a mutation
thrives it becomes a new species [ie bears] but we don't see the ones that
don't thrive, naturally, and there are lots.

If there are issues - stop breeding! - I was a bit surprised they kept
breeding that pair when there was obviously a problem.  Making it out to be
the healthy Merle's problem instead of the breeder's is biased writing and
can twist the story.




  _____  

From: Kavi <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, November 6, 2010 2:24:27 AM
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Fw: merle / Read this article on Merle chi's

  



Hi everyone

please read this article on merles. I think they are the cutest... but after
reading this, I no longer want one..

http://www.picassochis.com/merles.htm

shanna

--- On Fri, 11/5/10, Amie McCaig <[email protected]> wrote:




From: Amie McCaig <[email protected]>
Subject: [Chihuahuas] Fw: merle
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, November 5, 2010, 11:09 PM


  
please read the article regarding merles. they may answer questions you
might have. 


My breeder and personal friend, who has been showing and breeding chi's for
more then 20 plus years, is very seriously thinking about not breeding and
chow chis's  due to the merle impact on the bred. and how difficult it is to
find quality animals without merle somewhere in the pedigree. 
In europe merles are band from the show ring and not recognized as a bred
color.

unfortantualy many many many breeders disagree with that the merle gene has
no affect on the bred, so they continue to use them in their breeding
program. for exactly some of the reasons posted. 

i stress that this is my opinion on merles. and I am only sharing
information, for individual education. Everyone can form their own opinions
based on facts. 

all the best,
Amie

--- On Mon, 11/17/08, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:



From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: merle
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, November 17, 2008, 10:56 PM



------------------------------ 

 

http://www.genmarkag.com/canine_faqs.php 

Health Problems Associated with the Merle Allele 

Both heterozygous merle (Mm) and homozygous double merle (MM) dogs may 

exhibit auditory and ophthalmic abnormalities including mild to severe 

deafness, increased intraocular pressure, ametropia, microphthalmia 

and colobomas. The double merle genotype may also be associated with 

abnormalities of skeletal, cardiac and reproductive systems. 

Health Concerns 

Increased Intraocular pressure: excessive pressure created in the eye. 

Ametropia: vision impairment due to a refractive error such that 

images fail to focus upon the retina. 

Microphthalmia: a smaller than normal eye due to a defect occurring 

early in development. Affected dogs may have prominent third eyelids. 

Other eye defects are common in animals with this condition, including 

defects of the cornea, anterior chamber, lens and retina. 

Coloboma - a defect in ocular tissue; a cleft or missing portion of 

components of the eye, most commonly affecting the iris. 

-------------------------------- 

http://www.kandeechihuahuas.com/merles/ftlowille.html     

----------------------------------------- 

The Chihuahua standard reads, "any color--solid, marked, or splashed."  This
refers to color, not modifiers that act on color. The merle gene is a
modifier producing a pattern, not a color--the merle gene modifies, or acts
on, any color it is paired with. Deafness and/or blindness (partial or
complete) has already been proved to be associated with a single copy of the
merle gene in Chihuahuas . Once this foreign gene gets into our light colors
(fawns, creams, white-spotteds, etc.), it will not be detectable to the eye
and it can easily creep into any line through an outcross. Color pedigrees
will not help since many puppies change color as they grow and are not
registered correctly.  

Merles & Genetics 

For those who are not familiar with the merle gene, one fact is
indisputable:  In order for a dog to BE a merle, it MUST HAVE one merle
parent, either sire or dam.  This gene cannot remain 'hidden' for
generations, like chocolate or blue, which are recessive colors, thus
proving that it has only recently been introduced into our breed. 

A merle dog (Mm genetically) contributes one of these genes when bred,
either M (merle) or m (non-merle).  If a puppy receives the M (merle) gene,
it will be merle. If it receives the m gene, it will not be merle. The M
(merle) gene acts on whatever coat color the puppy has.  

The problem with allowing the (new) merle color in Chihuahuas , is that we
have so many light-colored dogs.  Breeding these light dogs to merle will
result in fawn, cream, red, sable, white, etc. merles, which are often NOT
recognizable as merles as adults(though when bred to black tris, they will
produce blue merles, thus identifying one parent as a hidden merle). When
these hidden merles are bred to other merles (accidentally or unknowingly),
thus doubling up on the merle (M) gene, the result (if the puppy inherits
one M--merle--gene from each parent) will be a puppy with two M genes--a
homozygous merle. These puppies will be deaf and/or blind, and some will
have other internal health problems as well as possibly being infertile. The
fact that they are deaf and/or blind will not be recognized until they are
older (around weaning time), hence a decision will have to be made about
what to do with them.... 

At this time, there are already normal (single M) merle Chihuahuas which
have been diagnosed by two independent veterinarians with deafness and eye
problems that will lead to blindness. Is this really for the betterment of
the breed?  

The Inheritance of Coat Color in Dogs, by Clarence Little, when listing
colors for Chihuahuas , does NOT list MERLE. 

----------------------------- 

"The Trouble with Merle"     Interesting article 


http://www.asca.org/Education/Advanced/troublemerle.htm 

 



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