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- <text id=94TT1738>
- <title>
- Dec. 12, 1994: Cover:Business:A Terrible Beauty
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/BUSINESS, Page 64
- A Terrible Beauty
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> An obsessive focus on show-ring looks is crippling, sometimes
- fatally, America's purebred dogs
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington, Dan Cray/Los Angeles and
- Wendy Cole/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Four years ago, Amanda and Bob Metzger of Exton, Pennsylvania,
- saw an ad for golden retriever puppies in the local newspaper
- and went to have a look. "Once we saw them," says Amanda, "we
- fell in love. We couldn't have left the place without one."
- They decided on a dog they named Jake--but being careful consumers,
- the Metzgers made sure the breeders had a solid reputation,
- insisted on an American Kennel Club certification of Jake's
- pedigree and got assurances that his parents were free of health
- problems before they handed over $325 for their dog.
- </p>
- <p> Their troubles started three months later. Jake began to limp
- on his left front leg; the vet diagnosed osteochondritis, an
- inherited bone condition, and had to operate. The bill came
- to $650. Six months later, Jake went lame again, and X-rays
- showed severe dysplasia, a hereditary weakness of the joints,
- in both hips. A $750 operation relieved his pain, but even with
- a dose of aspirin almost daily, Jake still walks stiffly. On
- top of that, he has severe allergies, dry skin and a poor coat.
- He has recently started having seizures as well. "He's a medical
- mess," says Amanda Metzger. "It just breaks my heart because
- he wants to play like a puppy, but he can't."
- </p>
- <p> It would be tempting to put Jake's problems down to plain bad
- luck--but in fact the odds were against him from the start.
- While most golden retrievers are healthier than Jake, a shocking
- 60% of them end up with the dysplasia that may yet cripple him,
- according to the University of Pennsylvania's School of Veterinary
- Medicine. Many are born with an undescended testicle, another
- hereditary condition vets say can cause the gland to become
- cancerous.
- </p>
- <p> Yet even if they had chosen another breed, the Metzgers would
- have been taking a chance. The appalling truth is that as many
- as 25% of the 20 million purebred dogs in America--1 in 4
- animals--are afflicted with a serious genetic problem. German
- shepherds, for example, run an even higher risk of hip dysplasia
- than do golden retrievers. Labrador retrievers are prone to
- dwarfing. At least 70% of collies suffer from genetic eye trouble,
- and 10% eventually go blind. Dalmatians are often deaf. Cocker
- spaniels tend to have bad tempers. Great Danes have weak hearts.
- English bulldogs have such enormous heads that pups often have
- to be delivered by cesarean section. Newfoundlands can drop
- dead from cardiac arrests. Chinese Shar-Peis, the wrinkly dogs
- that don't seem to fit into their skin, have congenital skin
- disorders. And Irish setters, laments veterinarian Michael Fox,
- a vice president of the Humane Society of the U.S., "are so
- dumb they can't find their way to the end of the leash."
- </p>
- <p> The list goes on and on, running to more than 300 separate genetic
- disorders that subject dogs to enormous pain, roil the emotional
- life of their owners and, estimates Dr. William Schall, a genetic
- specialist at Michigan State University, cost almost $1 billion
- in vet bills and lost revenues from stillborn pups, which cannot
- be sold.
- </p>
- <p> Bad genes are a universal hazard of life, of course; practically
- every species suffers from inherited diseases. But golden retrievers
- and other purebreds are not like most other animals. They are
- in a very real sense artificial, molded over thousands of years
- through selective breeding to satisfy human needs. For most
- of that time, those needs have largely been companionship and
- labor, and dogs have prospered.
- </p>
- <p> Within the past century, though, and especially over the past
- 50 years, the most popular types have been bred almost exclusively
- to look good--with "good" defined by breed-specific dog clubs
- and the American Kennel Club (AKC). "Form has been separated
- from function," says Brian Kilcommons, a dog trainer in Middletown,
- New York."Styles come in vogue. The competition at dog shows
- is geared almost exclusively to looks." This focus on beauty
- above all means that attractive but unhealthy animals have been
- encouraged to reproduce--a sort of survival of the unfittest.
- The result is a national canine-health crisis, from which few
- breeds have escaped.
- </p>
- <p> The astonishing thing is that despite the scope of these diseases,
- veterinary researchers know next to nothing about what causes
- them or how to cure them. Only 23 of the hundreds of known disorders
- can currently be picked up by genetic lab tests. Biologists
- know far more about the heredity of the fruit fly, in fact,
- than they do about canine genetics. That is because there are
- fewer than 100 canine geneticists in the world, working at just
- a handful of major universities--and they are constantly scraping
- for funding.
- </p>
- <p> The lack of research money is especially disconcerting when
- one considers that dogs are the nation's most popular pets.
- Almost 36 million households have them, compared with the 29.2
- million that keep cats, according to the Humane Society of the
- U.S. More Americans spend more than $8 billion a year on their
- dogs, not counting the initial purchase. The AKC alone raked
- in $29 million last year, about three-fourths of it from the
- $25 or more it charges to register each pedigreed pup and provide
- a copy of its family tree. But the AKC annual report shows that
- the club cut its grants for education and research into the
- health of dogs from $1.675 million in 1992 to $575,000 in 1993.
- </p>
- <p> Who is to blame for the shabby treatment of humanity's best
- friend? The AKC, with its focus on pedigrees and beauty pageants
- rather than canine well-being? Legitimate breeders, who supply
- customers with beautiful but sometimes damaged puppies? Puppy
- mills, which do the same but at much higher volume and in search
- of greater profits? Or the public, more insistent with each
- passing year that a mutt--a "randomly bred dog," to be politically
- correct--simply won't do?
- </p>
- <p> They are all partly at fault. But it is hard to avoid putting
- the AKC high on the list. While the club is not the only dog
- registry in the country, it is certainly the biggest, best known
- and most powerful. It is because of this power that the AKC
- has been largely unchallenged over the years. "Criticize the
- AKC, and there will be retribution," says one New York dog trainer.
- "Judges may find they are no longer getting assignments. Breeders
- might discover their dogs are no longer winning prizes." The
- AKC acknowledges that it is perceived as overbearing. "I think
- it's a fact of life that people have that fear, and it's unfortunate,"
- responds John Mandeville, the club's vice president for planning.
- </p>
- <p> The AKC does not need to resort to intimidation, however, to
- have an overwhelming influence. It sponsors most of the nation's
- dog shows, events that reinforce the insidious notion that beauty
- is a dog's paramount virtue. It also keeps track of purebred
- pedigrees, yet it requires no proof of good health to certify
- an animal. All it takes to get AKC certification is proof of
- pedigreed parentage. Says Fox: "The best use of pedigree papers
- is for housebreaking your dog. They don't mean a damn thing.
- You can have an immune-deficient puppy that is about to go blind
- and has epilepsy, hip dysplasia, hemophilia and one testicle,
- and the AKC will register it."
- </p>
- <p> No one at the kennel club denies this. AKC certification "is
- absolutely not a Good Housekeeping seal of approval, unfortunately,"
- says Mandenville. "It's acquired a lot of these trappings because
- the idea of `AKC-registered' is so widely known."
- </p>
- <p> Or, to be blunt, because it has such snob appeal. The American
- Kennel Club was founded 110 years ago by a group of American
- bluebloods who pledged "to do everything to advance the study,
- breeding, exhibiting, running and maintenance of purity of thoroughbred
- dogs." At the time purebreds were status symbols, owned exclusively
- by the wealthy and prized for their strength, skill and intelligence
- as much as for their looks.
- </p>
- <p> But during the 1940s, as the middle class sucked in vast numbers
- of new members with aspirations of gentility, these Americans
- began to insist on purebreds too, and their popularity took
- off. In 1944 the AKC registered 77,400 dogs; that jumped to
- 235,978 in 1949, and by 1970, the club was issuing papers on
- a million dogs a year. (The total last year: 1.4 million.)
- </p>
- <p> The number of AKC-sponsored dog shows has increased just as
- dramatically. In 1894 there were a mere 11 all-breed shows.
- By 1954 there were 384, and last year a total of 1.3 million
- dogs competed in 1,177 different exhibitions. Then as now, the
- idea was to show off the owners' prize breeding stock.
- </p>
- <p> But the concept of what makes a dog valuable for breeding has
- changed. While obedience and field trials were once considered
- at least as important as beauty contests, the canine equivalent
- of the swimsuit competition has all but taken over. Historians
- have yet to explain this ideological shift, but the AKC has
- one idea: "You could almost say this venerable institution with
- its great credibility and history has been infiltrated slowly
- by the type of people it was not intended to deal with," says
- Wayne Cavenaugh, the group's spokesman. Whatever the reason,
- animals with names such as Rainbow's Maggie Rose O'Koehl and
- Jrees Buddy Holly are brushed, hairsprayed, beribboned and otherwise
- tarted up before going in front of the judges. Says Buddy Holly's
- owner, Jan Smith of Wichita, Kansas, a longtime exhibitor of
- Great Danes (and herself the runner-up for Miss Congeniality
- in the 1965 Miss Arkansas pageant): "When the ears are too flat,
- we use cement to make them perky. We use chalk to color the
- legs, which is fine as long as you don't use copious amounts."
- </p>
- <p> That's just the final polish, though: no dog can hope to be
- a champion without conforming to a very narrow standard of physical
- perfection set by individual dog clubs and ratified by the AKC.
- And customer-conscious breeders have obliged by creating prizewinning
- dogs with specific traits, such as long ears in cocker spaniels
- or sloping hips in German shepherds.
- </p>
- <p> Biologically, this is just asking for trouble. For one thing,
- the characteristics judges and clubs have decreed to be gorgeous
- can themselves be bad for the animals' health--huge heads
- on bulldogs that make it difficult for them to be born naturally,
- for example, or the wrinkled skin on Shar-Peis that sets them
- up for rashes. For another, the best way to produce a puppy
- with a specific look is to mate two dogs who have that same
- look. As with any species, though, the closest resemblances
- are found among the closest relatives. So breeders often resort
- to inbreeding, the mating of brothers and sisters or fathers
- and daughters. Or they "line-breed," having grandparents mate
- with grandchildren or cousins with each other. "If we did that
- in humans," says Mark Derr, who wrote a scathing indictment
- of America's dog culture for the March 1990 Atlantic Monthly,
- "we'd call it incest."
- </p>
- <p> Both practices increase the likelihood of genetic disease. It
- is not that purebreds have more defective genes than other dogs,
- or that inbreeding somehow causes healthy genes to go bad. Most
- hereditary disorders in dogs are caused by recessive genes;
- as long as an animal has a good copy of the gene from one parent,
- it will override a bad copy from the other parent. But if both
- parents pass on the same bad gene--which is more likely if
- mother and father come from the same family--the puppy has
- a problem.
- </p>
- <p> The problem intensifies with what experts call "the popular
- sire effect," the result of a single desirable male's being
- used to sire a large number of litters. Says Michigan State's
- Schall: "If it is later determined that the male that looked
- perfect has a genetic disease, he will have dispersed it widely
- before it gets discovered."
- </p>
- <p> Hereditary weakness can be introduced even when there is no
- underlying genetic defect at all. The biological interplay between
- individual genes can be extremely complicated, and breeding
- to enhance one characteristic can have unintended consequences.
- Vets believe the retinal disease that afflicts most collies
- may fall into this category. The gene responsible may lie very
- close to the one that gives collies their long noses and closely
- set eyes--traits that have been deliberately emphasized by
- breeders. Says Dr. Donald Patterson, chief of the medical genetics
- section at the University of Pennsylvania's School of Veterinary
- Medicine: "Many people have bred dogs for desired traits, but
- in the process of doing this they have also got undesirable
- ones. The objective should be to combine breeding for good traits
- with more careful planning to get rid of genetic defects. Unfortunately,
- not much attention has been paid to that."
- </p>
- <p> The AKC insists that it is not at fault: the breeders are. Asked
- why club-sponsored shows put much more emphasis on appearance
- than health, Mandeville responds that "this is America. If this
- size is good, this size is better. We reflect, unfortunately,
- the breeding of dogs ((that)) people register with us. Are there
- genetic problems? Absolutely. Are there temperament problems?
- Absolutely. Are there people making poorly informed breeding
- decisions? Far too many."
- </p>
- <p> The club is just a registry, he says, so "don't rely on a registry
- to make an informed decision for you." Why don't AKC registrations
- carry health and temperament requirements--as comparable certification
- does in Germany and Sweden? Says Mandeville: "It's the Big Brother
- argument. At what point does regulation of the individual for
- the greater good step on the individual's toes?"
- </p>
- <p> Mandeville also claims that any attempt by the AKC to limit
- registration would trigger government sanctions. "We would like
- to be able to say, `I'm sorry, we're not registering your dog,'
- but we would be in court faster than your head would spin. The
- Federal Trade Commission has rules and regulations in this country
- about restriction of trade."
- </p>
- <p> Plenty of dog owners reject this sort of reasoning--and shun
- the blessings of American Kennel Club membership as well. The
- U.S. Border Collie Club is vigorously resisting AKC efforts
- to add border collies to the 137 breeds it formally recognizes
- (there are more than 300 breeds worldwide). The border-collie
- owners and breeders are convinced that AKC recognition would
- create pressure to breed the dogs for their looks at the inevitable
- expense of their intelligence and herding instincts. "We are
- concerned that the working ability of our dogs would be completely
- lost," says Donald McCaig, a breeder in Williamsville, Virginia,
- and a spokesman for the club.
- </p>
- <p> The Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Club voted overwhelmingly
- last May to reject AKC recognition for another reason: their
- conviction that the AKC values its own revenues over a dog's
- welfare. Cavalier breeders do not allow the dogs to be sold
- in pet stores, which are infamous for buying animals from shady
- sources, including puppy mills. In fact, most dog experts routinely
- warn buyers not to deal with pet stores at all. The AKC insists,
- though, that the Cavalier club drop its prohibition as a condition
- of affiliation. Why would it take such a position? Perhaps because
- some 7% of the group's $21 million in dog-registration earnings
- comes from pet-store sales. "They simply want to gain as many
- registrations as possible because money is power," says the
- Humane Society's Fox.
- </p>
- <p> Greed cuts both ways, of course. Six Labrador retriever breeders
- say they have filed a class action against the AKC and the Labrador
- Retriever Club Inc. for changing the breed standard to favor
- slimmer, longer-legged animals over the traditional stockier,
- shorter ones--thereby devaluing the out-of-date model. And
- some owners of a relatively rare dog called the Havanese, which
- arrived in this country from Cuba in the mid-1970s, are actively
- seeking AKC recognition, despite worries by other owners that
- they are inviting overbreeding and genetic problems.
- </p>
- <p> "It's a competitive world, and money talks," says one Havanese
- breeder. "For many people, winning dog shows is a thrill and
- makes them proud, and the AKC has a lot of shows." Perhaps more
- to the point, once the Havanese join the high-profile AKC fold,
- the going rate for puppies, according to some breeders, could
- go as high as $2,000, up from about $750 now. On average, registered
- puppies go for 10 to 20 times the price of paperless dogs, and
- champion purebreds can sell for as much as $50,000.
- </p>
- <p> Most of these genetic problems would disappear if Americans
- could somehow be persuaded to abandon purebreds in favor of
- mutts. While individual mixed-breed dogs have problems, the
- animals on average are a lot healthier than their high-class
- cousins. "Mutts are the Hondas of the dog world," says syndicated
- animal columnist Mike Capuzzo of the Philadelphia Inquirer.
- "They're cheap, reliable and what nature intended in the first
- place. They are what you would get at a canine Club Med if you
- left them alone for six years." There are "breeds" in the mutt
- world, just as there are among purebreds. The most popular:
- a cross between a Labrador retriever and a German shepherd.
- </p>
- <p> But even if the U.S. cannot be cured of its addiction to purebreds--probably a safe assumption--there is plenty that can be
- done to improve overall canine health. One factor that is forcing
- breeders to pay closer attention to genetic problems is the
- emergence of puppy lemon laws in a dozen states, including New
- York, Massachusetts, California and Florida. If a dog is found
- to have a debilitating defect, owners can get a refund or a
- healthy dog in exchange, or they can force the breeder to pay
- the vet bills to repair a problem.
- </p>
- <p> The laws are not entirely fair to breeders, though, says George
- Padgett, a veterinary pathologist at Michigan State University.
- "Some may be penalized unfairly because no one has taught them
- about genetic defects." Agrees Penn's Dr. Donald Patterson,
- founder of the genetic section of the University of Pennsylvania's
- School of Veterinary Medicine and widely acknowledged as the
- dean of canine genetic research, "The common misconception is
- that breeders are cavalier." The real problem, he says, is that
- they have not had the scientific information to detect hidden
- defects and thus avoid bad breeding decisions.
- </p>
- <p> That is starting to change. One new tool that should prove helpful
- is a computerized genetic-disease data base developed at Patterson's
- lab that lists more than 300 genetic problems plaguing dogs.
- Another is the university's PennHIP program, a hip-disease-detection
- system that took 11 years and $1 million to develop. It involves
- taking detailed measurements of hip X-rays to grade the severity
- of dysplasia. The program is being marketed by International
- Canine Genetics Inc., a research company based in Malverne,
- Pa., which is already training vets to use it. "A tighter-fitting
- hip joint is better, and we now have the technology to determine
- which hips are tighter," says Dr. Gail Smith, an engineer and
- veterinarian who developed the test. "This will help people
- select the best breeding dogs."
- </p>
- <p> Lists and detection systems are not the same as cures, but Patterson
- points out that veterinary researchers are finally beginning
- to have some insight into the causes of these disorders. "Canine
- genetic diseases," he says, "are now being defined at the molecular
- level, and the mapping of the canine genome is at last under
- way." Scientists have located the genes that cause muscular
- dystrophy in golden retrievers, and "shaking pup" syndrome in
- Welsh springer spaniels. They're working on identifying the
- genes responsible for failure-to-thrive metabolic problems in
- giant Schnauzers, bleeding disorders in Scottish terriers and
- Doberman pinschers, and the hereditary deafness that affects
- about 30% of Dalmatians. And they believe hip dysplasia, the
- crippling condition that afflicts Jake the golden retriever
- and his kin, may be the result of several defective genes working
- in concert--not an unusual situation with hereditary disorders.
- </p>
- <p> On the supply side, critics of the AKC argue that the kennel
- club should follow the lead of its European counterparts by
- imposing health standards as part of its registration process.
- Rather than wait for that step, individual-breed clubs are taking
- their own action. At least three Rottweiler clubs have ruled
- that dogs missing more than one tooth, which can be a sign of
- a genetic defect, may not be bred. English springer spaniel
- owners are encouraging one another not to breed dogs with temperament
- problems; they want to eliminate what they call the "rage syndrome,"
- a type of brain seizure that makes some dogs lose control. And
- the Portuguese Water Dog Club requires breeders who advertise
- in its magazine to submit copies of hip, eye and heart clearances
- to prove that their dogs are not suffering from genetic defects.
- </p>
- <p> The Portuguese Water Dog Club is perhaps the most active organization
- in policing genetic defects. Water dogs tend to suffer from
- progressive retinal atrophy, which causes blindness, and from
- an enzyme deficiency that can kill dogs by storing toxins in
- the nervous system. The club offered in 1987 to finance several
- researchers at major veterinary schools to develop screening
- tests for the diseases. The result is a blood test that found
- 16% of the dogs to be carriers in 1990. Club members stopped
- breeding the afflicted animals, and by 1993 the incidence had
- dropped to 7%.
- </p>
- <p> With such grass-roots pressure, and perhaps a bit battered by
- bad publicity and lawsuits, the AKC has lately shown some interest
- in promoting this kind of research itself. In October it sponsored
- its first-ever canine-genetics conference, where 25 leading
- researchers gave talks to an audience of some 150 veterinary
- scientists from around the world. And during the past month
- there have been discussions within the club about setting up
- a scientific advisory panel that would recommend research projects
- the club might support. If the ancient American Kennel Club
- is finally thinking of altering its culture, there may yet be
- hope for the family dog.
-
- </p></body>
- </article>
- </text>
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