brookcove
Posted : 12/28/2006 11:54:18 PM
I prefer to break it down into "random bred" and "purpose bred" for this type of discussion. Dogs which are matched with care taken to increase the likeliness of soundness, will almost certainly have a better shot at being sound than a pup that is the result of a random breeding, whether purebred or mixed breed.
Dogs which are "outcrossed" have slightly better odds of not inheriting a double shot of a recessive gene
that is unknown to exist. Inbreeding lines known to be clear, however, can set soundness in the line, while matching known carrier lines with non-carrier can continue excellent traits that the carrier lines offer, while increasing the odds that a non-carrier will be produced with those same desireable traits. My own pup Ted is the product of such a breeding - single gene carrier to non-carrier - I do not yet know his status but he will remain un-neutered for that reason until I know. This is possible with a few of the eye disorders that affect Border Collies, plus the MDR-1delta mutation, as there are now DNA tests to detect the genetic status of a potential breeding animal - whether the animal carries two genes, only one, or is not a carrier at all.
So it has nothing to do with whether the dog is the same breed or not, but whether the two parents carry the same genes for soundness issues.
ETA: It is primarily the designer mutt breeders these days who have spread the hype about purebred dogs being intrinsically less sound than a "cross breed" - it should be pretty obvious what their motivation is in getting people to beleive that purebreds are somehow
inferior to their overpriced puppies.