Sheila,Can you please clarify for me what article you are referring to on "this 
person website" that is mentioning merles being larger then other chi's? The 
articles I have seen, are scientific; not based on personal opinion. thanksAmie

--- On Sat, 11/6/10, dasha <[email protected]> wrote:

From: dasha <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [Chihuahuas] Fw: merle / Read this article on Merle chi's
To: [email protected]
Date: Saturday, November 6, 2010, 11:48 AM















 
 



  


    
      
      
      


You 
really should not believe everything you read on the net. I read several errors 
or false information about merles on this person's website. 
The one about 
Merle's being larger than other chi's is just bunk. I tend to believe the 
scientific evidence rather than the panic modes. Yes you have to be careful to 
not breed Merle on Merle and IMO that is where the careless breeders come in 
that are using dogs where they don't know the lineage as they should.  
Somewhere is my vast library of dog articles I have tons of scientific research 
and articles on Merles. When I get a chance I will find and post. I really 
really dislike it when people who don't know what they are talking about post 
information like it was the truth. (not talking about you)
 
Sheila



From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kavi
Sent: 
Saturday, November 06, 2010 2:24 AM
To: 
[email protected]
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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