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Cathrine said:I can add some more recent pics of Mac, he is 1 1/2 years old in these.He is the typical bull whippet!
No, it DOES matter. It matters because the single copy of this gene appears to confer a competitive speed advantage which is gained via the introduction of a mutation found in non-pedigree lines.jensen said:Tony Taylor said:As far as bulls in American pedigrees goes i would venture this may have more to do with English non ped blood in the breeding rather than a spontaneous mutation.
Whether the condition is caused by a single gene is IMO equivicable. Whippet racing is a power sport as it is a sprint race and clearly well muscled dogs are an advantage and do well and hence are used to breed from. Its plauable that the gene is recessive but partialy expressed ( rather like sickle cell aneamia) and confers an advantage when a single autosome is present but when both are the recessive gene a bull occurs. Why there is also commonly skeletal defects is more difficult to explain.
The fact is, it doesn't really matter how it got into the bloodlines.
jen
From looking at the results, no (UK)!Is there a single instance of the bully or the bully gene found in UK pedigree stock or in USA pedigree stock which is not controversial in pedigree?
seaspot_run said:I have friends who submitted their very heavy muscled, very big, very broad-headed, quite fast pedigree Whippets off of pre-1980 USA straight racing lines and they did not show up as carriers of this gene in that study.
Terry & Sheila Smith said:Is there such a thing as "double muscling" or are we just talking heavily muscled dogs ? Have any of these dogs been dissected (after a natural death) & actually been found to indeed have 2 sets of muscles? Is it possible to have such a mutation that only manifests itself in a dogs musclature & nowhere else?
dogsbutt said:So if this is a confidential study why do you know all of the clear whippets? Shouldn't you just know the identity of the 8 whippets that are pictured?
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