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Is it true that when a female breed dog mates with a cur then 7 generations of her puppies are ruined? Ruined in that matter that all these puppies are not breed dogs and in all of these you can see the cur anchestor. How is it even possible? How can one cur make a difference in so many generations, even if all the other puppies are mated with breed dogs?

2006-08-28 04:45:04 · 10 answers · asked by Joanna R 1 in Pets Dogs

10 answers

Call the AKC or the CKC. They can answer your question.

2006-08-28 04:50:02 · answer #1 · answered by kksay 5 · 1 1

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2016-11-05 23:02:20 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

what you mean is that litter and their subsequent litters. Not all her puppies no matter what she's bred to. And yes when you mix them you get a mutt if you cross it back to a pure dog it still produces more mutts. Those mixed genes may or may not show up every generation and may show up in only some of a litter. But the genes are still there that's why they can trace DNA through great periods of time to your ancestors.

2006-08-28 05:03:18 · answer #3 · answered by emily 5 · 0 1

I think it runs something like this:

Breed Mom + Mutt Dad = puppies that are only 50% Breed

F1: 50% Breed pup +100% Breed mate = puppies that are only 75% Breed

F2: 75% Breed pup + 100% Breed mate = puppies that are only 87.5% Breed

F3: 87.5% Breed pup +100% Breed mate = puppies that are only 93% Breed

F4: 93% Breed pup +100% Breed mate = puppies that are only 96.5% Breed

F5: 96.5% Breed pup + 100% Breed mate = puppies that are only 98% Breed

F6: 98% Breed pup + 100% Breed mate = puppies that are only 99% Breed

This is about the level that they can be considered "purebred" for the purposes of geneology, and to "cover" the mutt genes.

It's also important to note that with many of the respectable registries, a dog cannot be registered unless both of its parents are registered. A dog with a "mutt" parent can't be registered, so its offspring can't be registered, and so on and so on and so on.

(Please note this is based on my experience with alpacas and figuring their 'Peruvianness', so may not totally apply to dogs)

2006-08-28 04:56:11 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

No, it will not affect future litters. If you compare this to humans, think about it. Let's say you are of pure German ancestry and your husband is of pure Italian ancestry, and you have a child. Your child would be German and Italian. Now let's say you get remarried and have another child with your new husband who is of pure German ancestry. Your newest child would be German. There wouldn't be a bit of your first husband's Italian blood in him.

Think about it the other way. Could you imagine the second child having to explain, "Well, my mom and dad are both German. But my mom told me that even though her first husband died years before I was born, I'm Italian because she had my half-sister with him."

It's the same thing with dogs.

2006-08-28 17:21:11 · answer #5 · answered by GSDoxie3 4 · 0 0

Because the genes of the mutt will show up for several generations until they are eliminated by other dominant genes from full bred dogs.

The wording of your question is kind of confusing ...

To clarify, it's the descendents of the half-breed puppies that will not be purebred, but if the female has MORE litters, with a full bred dog, they will not be affected.

2006-08-28 04:51:42 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

If you are asking if her future litters are "ruined," no, as long as she mates with a male of her breed. But if the mixed puppies have pups, even if they mate with a purebreed, they will be mixed, as will this generation's pups, etc.

2006-08-28 05:03:55 · answer #7 · answered by melissa k 6 · 1 1

I think because it will take seven generations of breeding with only purebred dogs to insure that all of the "unpure" genetics are removed from this line. Probably by the sixth generation, there would be only one pup from any litter showing any "unpure" traits, but by the seventh, all the pups will again be purebred with no "outside" traits.

2006-08-28 04:56:26 · answer #8 · answered by 420Linda 4 · 0 2

No. A accidental breeding will only effect that litter, not future litters.
Anyone who says otherwise is either uneducated in dog breeding and genetics or just crazy!


vet tech

2006-08-28 04:52:38 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

YES!!! ONCE a MUTT/MONGREL or different breed is introduced,it's there *FOREVER*!!!

NO off-spring from such will EVER be PUREBRED!!

2006-08-28 07:02:36 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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