Aussie Genetics Fact Sheet: What's Wrong
With White Aussies?
by C.A. Sharp
An Australian Shepherd with a coat mostly snowy white sounds beautiful,
but for decades all the breed standards have made having even so little
as a third of the coat white a disqualification -- meaning such dogs
cannot be exhibited at dog shows and should not be bred. Why?
Aussies with mostly white coats can be produced when two merle Aussies are bred together. Merle is the patch-work coloring (black and grey or liver and buff) most associated with the breed. When a puppy inherits two copies of the gene for merle, it will usually have a lot of white in its coat.
If these puppies only had lots of white, there wouldn't be a problem.
Unfortunately, most of them are also blind, deaf or both. This is
the reason that the breed standards disqualify white dogs and why
knowledgeable breeders will not raise them.
Life for a dog which is blind or deaf can be difficult. The defects
cannot be cured or corrected by surgery or other treatments. Sometimes
such dogs will tend to bite when startled. People who own white Aussies
must take extra care all through their dog's life--which can be 15
years or more--to make sure the dog cannot harm itself or anyone else
because of its disabilities.
If someone offers to sell you a white Aussie, don't buy it. If you
already have one, have your vet check for defects in its vision and
hearing, then take whatever precautions are necessary to protect your
dog and those around it. |
|