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6 answers

No.

2007-01-16 07:12:19 · answer #1 · answered by Katslookup - a Fostering Fool! 6 · 0 1

that isn't exactly how it works. Purebreed dogs don't necessarily mean that all their genes are dominant. It just means they are dogs that have been bred to uphold certain standards. The traits themselves may be associated with recessive genes, and the genes of a mut would be expressed over those of the pure breed. It all depends too. If the trait is a multifactorial one, meaning it is influenced by several genes and perhaps other factors like nutrition, then it would have little forseable effect unless you had a geneticist who knew genome of each animal.

2007-01-16 15:19:08 · answer #2 · answered by Hans B 5 · 0 2

No, it does not affect any future breeding..Each puppy is concieved when the sperm of the male penetrates the ova of the female. All genetic traits are established at that union..The sperm has a lifespan of about 8 days, at best..So, a future breeding would only be affected by the male used for that breeding.

This is a very common old belief, that even my mother in law believed..but, in this era of microscropes and more studies, leading to the understanding of the reproductive sciences, it has been proven a myth.

2007-01-16 15:12:26 · answer #3 · answered by Chetco 7 · 1 1

its a myth and not one that even souds plausible. Each breeding is different and no the next time around they wont be mutts unless you allow it to happen again or perpously breed mutts

2007-01-16 20:41:41 · answer #4 · answered by bobby t 2 · 0 0

No - All future puppies will be Mutts

2007-01-16 15:13:08 · answer #5 · answered by Yo LO! 6 · 0 4

NO!!!!!!!!!!!

2007-01-16 21:09:38 · answer #6 · answered by Great Dane Lover 7 · 0 0

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