What is a dog breeder?
Thanks to NAIA for providing permission to repost this article. More information about the NAIA can be found at
www.naiaonline.org. Copyright © 2008 National Animal Interest Alliance
The ancient partnership between dogs and man has changed over the
centuries, but the bond remains as strong as ever. Today's dogs seldom ply
their ancient trades, but they have amassed an impressive new repertoire of
skills. The most common career for dogs these days is "pet," but
these remarkable animals also demonstrate an array of skills ranging from
finding lost children to ferreting out contraband, tracking criminals, helping
physically and mentally impaired people, joining owners in a variety of sports
and games, and guarding livestock from endangered predators. The value of
well-bred dogs as pets and partners is indisputable.
Responsible breeders maintain the health and integrity of ancient
breeds and provide a wonderful variety of dogs so that millions of people
worldwide can select a dog of the size, coat type, temperament, appearance, and
character that will fit their lifestyle. Purebred dog owners, breeders,
exhibitors, and clubs are primary sources for public education about dog care
and they are the backbone of dog rescue efforts and advances in canine
medicine.
Dog shows provide information on dog care, opportunities to see
and compare dozens of breeds, and a venue to support canine education, health,
and rescue efforts. Kennel, breed, obedience, and performance clubs provide
forums for breeders, trainers, and exhibitors to share knowledge and improve
methods of care and training. Such clubs are major contributors to community
education about responsible dog ownership. They help local shelters through
rescue programs and donations and provide aid to individuals who need help with
pet dog training, locating a responsible breeder, or with other dog-related
questions or concerns. Breeders work with scientists to reduce the incidence of
genetic abnormalities in their breeds, and clubs donate funding for research
through the AKC Canine Health Foundation and the Morris Animal Foundation to
provide veterinary advances for all dogs - purebred and mixed breed.
NAIA backs the responsible breeding and showing of purebred dogs
and opposes coercive legislation aimed at breeders. NAIA also supports
participation in dog sports and other recreational activities that depend on
canine working partners; the use of dogs in law enforcement and search and
rescue missions; dogs as companions and helpers under the Americans with
Disabilities Act; the voluntary sterilization and identification of pets, and
reasonable efforts to rescue unwanted dogs for placement in new homes.
People have taken an active role in animal breeding for thousands
of years. Maintaining these natural and long-standing associations with animals
has become problematic only with the rise of our urban/suburban society and the
dilemmas caused by surplus and nuisance pets. Because of these changes,
however, today's breeders need to educate themselves about dogs, about specific
breeds, and about socializing and training. They also need to plan each
breeding decision to ensure positive outcomes for their puppies and must be
prepared to take back dogs and offer advice on socializing and training in
order to assure success. NAIA believes that those who are unwilling to spend
the necessary time and effort to make informed decisions, carefully place
puppies, and maintain contact with puppy buyers should leave breeding to those
who have the dedication to do so.
A puppy will live with a family for a dozen years or more, so
selecting just the right breed and breeder can be critical to initiating and
developing a strong bond with the dog. Although any dog may become a valued and
well-loved pet, well-bred purebred dogs have an advantage over mixed breed dogs
because of their consistency: their size, coat type, exercise needs, energy
level, trainability, and temperament can be predicted within a narrow range,
thus allowing prospective buyers to purchase a puppy that meets their lifestyle
and living conditions. Well-bred purebred dogs are carefully bred to the
standard of their breed. Dogs that do not meet the breed standard for these
characteristics may not be suitable for individual situations. For example,
Golden Retrievers and Labrador Retrievers are often acquired because they are
known for being easily trained, enjoying an active life, and loving children,
but a poorly-bred dog of either breed may be hyperactive, bull-headed, and
snappish, or have other inherited behavior or health characteristics that make
it a poor choice for a family. Thus selecting both the right breed and breeder
are crucial for success.
Once the breed is selected, the search for a puppy can begin. To
recognize the differences among breeders and other sources that sell or place
dogs with the public, the following categories may be useful. Like all attempts
at labeling, the categories that are described below represent generalities
that won't be true for every case. Puppy buyers are urged to do their homework
and use a good measure of common sense.
Generally speaking, breeders can be divided into two general
categories: non-commercial and commercial.
Non-commercial
breeders fall into two
additional categories: 1) breed enthusiasts,
also known as breed fanciers or show breeders, including performance dog breeders who select dogs with the ability
and temperament to participate in certain sports or to perform particular jobs;
and 2) casual breeders
who dabble in breeding.
Breed enthusiasts
(also known as show breeders, purebred dog fanciers, hobbyists and responsible
breeders) who follow breed club guidelines and codes of ethics are NAIA's top
choice as a source of pet puppies. Breed enthusiasts are motivated by several
factors: Love of a breed; a desire to contribute to the improvement of breed
health and performance skills; enjoyment of breed competitions and sports; and
pleasure in the company of other breed and dog admirers. Breed enthusiasts who
join dog clubs breed for health, temperament and breed type; screen their
breeding stock for genetic abnormalities; become knowledgeable about breed
history and bloodlines; provide appropriate health care and housing for adult
dogs and puppies; raise, train, and socialize puppies in their homes; participate
in dog shows so their dogs can be evaluated for adherence to specific breed
standards of excellence and for performance ability; and help with public
education efforts promoted by national and local dog organizations. Breed
enthusiasts are sometimes called "responsible dog breeders."
The hallmarks by which these breeders can be recognized are:
·
They breed and raise dogs in their homes, typically keeping one
or two (sometimes three) breeds of dogs in the house or in a clean kennel.
·
Their dogs appear healthy and
well-socialized.
·
Their breeding stock meets the
standard of excellence for the breed and is screened for genetic diseases and
structural problems prior to producing a litter.
·
They study their chosen breeds and
make decisions with breed structure, health, and temperament in mind.
·
They offer a contract that protects
the puppy and the buyer as well as the breeder.
·
They participate in breed activities,
including dog shows to assess the quality of potential breeding dogs and tests
and trials to assess performance ability, and help puppy buyers get involved in
these endeavors.
·
They join dog clubs and participate in
club projects ranging from public education programs and dog training classes
to dog shows.
Responsible breed enthusiasts producing animals for show, work,
or pets as a hobby or an avocation are more than happy to oblige potential
clients. Prospective buyers can see where litters are raised, talk to the
breeder about health clearances and socialization, and meet the dam of the
litter. Responsible breed enthusiasts also help buyers select the best puppy
for their circumstances, often decline to place puppies of high-drive dogs in
laid-back pet homes, and remain available to help buyers after they take the
puppy home.
Passionate about dogs, breed enthusiasts take the time to learn
everything they can about their chosen breed. They participate in kennel clubs
that hold dog shows and educate the public about dog care in general and breed
behavior, health, and dog sports in particular. They take part in breed,
obedience, and field events to prove the mettle of their dogs and share the
love of dogs with other breeders and owners; attend seminars to expand their
knowledge of canine health and training; and serve as mentors to breed newcomers.
They register their dogs primarily with the American Kennel Club, the United
Kennel Club or a specific breed registry. They take back dogs if buyers can no
longer keep them, and they keep retired breeding and performance dogs if they
cannot find a good pet home for them. Many breed enthusiasts also help with
rescue of their breed with donations of time, space, or dollars and contribute
to research into inherited canine diseases personally and through their local
and national clubs. The American Kennel Club, the organization that most
responsible breed enthusiasts use to register their dogs, donates more than $1
million annually to promote canine health.
While responsible breed fanciers take pride in producing
high-quality show and working dogs, they also desire to place healthy puppies
and adult dogs as pets in suitable homes. The relationship doesn't end when the
puppy goes to its new family; responsible breed fanciers keep in touch with
buyers, answer questions about training and behavior, and enjoy the thriving
relationship between the dog and the family.
Prospective buyers can find responsible breeders of show dogs,
pets, and working dogs by contacting national or regional breed clubs or local
all-breed kennel or obedience clubs. Lists of club contacts can be found on the
AKC website. Breed clubs can also be located by browsing the web for
breed-specific sites. Prospective buyers should also consider attending area
dog shows to see good dogs and meet their breeders. Dog shows can be located by
subscribing to the American Kennel Club Gazette or by browsing www.infodog.com,
www.onofrio.com, www.royjonesdogshows.com.
Performance dog
breeders are hobbyists, sportsmen, or service dog organizations that
breed dogs primarily to do a job or participate in a sport. They breed dogs for
the temperament and ability to serve as working companions for handicapped
owners, or produce hunting dogs, herding dogs, guarding dogs, racing dogs, sled
dogs, and dogs with the temperament and stamina to participate in schutzhund and other sports. These breeders concentrate on
health and ability in producing high-energy, high-drive dogs that are good at
their jobs but which may not always be satisfactory as family pets because of
their Type A, workaholic personalities. Therefore, responsible performance dog
breeders take extra care in placing their puppies as pets.
Performance dog breeders have contributed volumes of information
to canine health and training and to an awareness of canine behavior and
history. From the USDA project to determine the value of certain breeds as
livestock guard dogs to the in-depth understanding about training and behavior
from service dog organizations and the studies of structure and health in sled
dogs and racing dogs, these breeders have coordinated efforts with
veterinarians and other professionals and thereby greatly enhanced the base of
knowledge about dogs.
Performance dogs love to do what they do. They run because they
want to run, not because they are forced to run. They herd and guard livestock
because they are suited for the work and naturally attracted to it. They help
people because they are rewarded for their behavior, not because they are
enslaved. They hunt because they are well-adapted to scenting and sighting game
and would do so whether domestic or wild.
NAIA appreciates the beauty and splendor of dogs performing
according to their nature and applauds those breeders and others who
responsibly produce, study, and train these dogs.
A note of caution: NAIA recommends that potential puppy buyers
use common sense when purchasing a puppy. If a breeder represents himself as
being a devoted breed enthusiast but his dogs are ill kept and poorly
socialized the buyer should question whether the breeder is truly what he
represents himself to be, and he should look elsewhere.
Casual breeders
are the other non-commercial breeders who raise dogs in their homes and sell
directly to the public. Known pejoratively as "backyard breeders,"
casual breeders breed litters so children or other family members can witness a
birth; because they mistakenly believe that a female dog needs a litter to be
'fulfilled,' because they hope to earn a little extra money and haven't yet
learned that litters often cost more than they bring in; and because they did
not neuter their pets or keep them properly confined.
These breeders produce both purebred dogs and mixes. They also
raise their animals in the home where a puppy purchaser can see the dam and the
conditions under which the litter was raised, but they generally lack the
knowledge and experience necessary to make prudent breeding decisions. They
almost certainly lack in-depth knowledge about breed conformation, temperament,
and training and are often uneducated about general health and inherited diseases,
normal and abnormal puppy and breed behavior, and training techniques for
instilling good manners or correcting unacceptable behaviors. They are
extremely unlikely to join clubs, participate in dog sports, attend seminars,
help with public education efforts, contribute to breed rescue efforts, or take
back dogs if placements don't work out. For these reasons they usually cannot
offer sound advice to their puppy buyers.
These amateur breeders are often disparaged by both anti-breeding
activists and show breeders because they can unwittingly contribute to
irresponsible dog ownership. Because producing healthy, well-bred puppies
requires in-depth knowledge and a professional attitude, NAIA urges casual
breeders to increase their knowledge of breeds and breeding so they can make
good decisions or to leave breeding to those who have the desire and
understanding to pursue it as an avocation.
Commercial breeders
sell dogs as a business through large kennels, pet stores, national magazine
ads, newspaper ads, and over the Internet. Commercial breeders may be regulated
or non-regulated. They may produce a single breed or multiple breeds, including
crossbreeds. They may keep as few as three breeding females or as many as
several hundred. They may sell to pet stores for resale or they may sell
directly to consumers from their kennels or through magazine, newspaper or
Internet ads.
Commercial kennels that sell dogs for resale in pet stores are
regulated by the US Department of Agriculture under the federal Animal Welfare
Act.(Links to the AWA and AWA regulations can be found at the APHIS
publications page at www.aphis.usda.gov/ac/publications.html. These kennels are
inspected annually for compliance with a set of housing and care standards,
including a plan for veterinary care. They can be fined or lose their operating
licenses if they do not abide by these regulations. Further, puppies sold in
pet stores possess AWA kennel license numbers that enable consumers to report
problems to USDA if they exist.
Commercial kennels that sell directly to consumers from their
facilities or through magazine ads or the Internet are not always required to
be federally regulated and may avoid oversight altogether.
Commercial breeders seldom participate in dog shows and other
events or belong to breed or kennel clubs. However, they may join local,
regional, or national trade associations that have a code of ethics and a set
of kennel standards and they may work to upgrade the welfare of the animals in
their industry. Many commercial breeders and pet stores belong to the Pet
Industry Joint Advisory Council, an association that conducts animal care
seminars and other events and works for reasonable animal welfare laws at the
state and federal levels.
Commercial breeders register their purebred dogs with several
organizations. The American Kennel Club is the best known of these registries
and the only one that conducts a large number of in-kennel inspections
(approximately 4000) each year. AKC conducts DNA screening to confirm dog
identity and checks dog and kennel conditions when they visit. If inspectors
find unhealthy dogs kept in substandard conditions, AKC suspends the
registration privileges of the breeders involved. AKC also now requires DNA
identification of dogs that sire more than three litters in a year or seven
litters in a lifetime; some commercial kennels have stopped registering with
AKC as a result and choose other registries that do not impose such stringent
requirements.
Some people use the term puppy mill and commercial kennel
synonymously implying that all commercial breeding is conducted in filthy,
substandard facilities where animal health and well-being are neglected and
breeding stock is abused. That is not the case. NAIA notes that some commercial
kennels are state of the art facilities producing healthy, well-socialized
puppies to sell to pet stores or directly to the public.
There are two major animal welfare issues that surround
commercial dog breeding. One deals with the need for minimum standards of care
and conditions for animals in breeding kennels. The other deals with the
question of whether or not it is ever appropriate for animals to be sold in pet
stores. Activists and breed enthusiasts alike may oppose the sale of puppies in
pet stores, but the myth that all pet store puppies come from puppy mills
misdirects energy, attention and resources away from genuine puppy mills that
need to be closed and away from gaining improvements at the retail level. The
activist tendency to paint the entire industry with the same brush has slowed
animal welfare improvements by blurring the issues.
Whenever possible puppy buyers should carefully evaluate the dogs
and husbandry practices in a kennel whose dogs they are considering. Buyers
should think long and hard before purchasing puppies from large commercial
kennels selling over the Internet or
through advertisements in national magazines. Buyers
who purchase dogs through ads cannot see the kennel, the parent dogs, or the
litter and cannot select their own puppies. If these outlets sell exclusively
through ads, they are not required to be federally inspected to assure
compliance with minimum husbandry standards. If they are not registered with
AKC, the only registry with a significant kennel inspection program, these
breeders can avoid oversight.
NAIA also cautions buyers to be wary of a variation on pyramid schemes that make novice puppy buyers part of the
kennel breeding program through contracts that require a bitch puppy to be bred
once or twice to a stud of the kennel's choice and make puppies available for
sale to the public. Such contracts allow the breeding kennel to expand its
business at the expense of the buyer and his dog. Breeding stock should be
carefully evaluated and breedings carefully planned,
not required of novices by contract when a puppy is purchased.
Pet stores sell about a half million puppies per year according
to Patronek and Rowan’s dog population compilation in
Anthrozoos
magazine in August 1996. These retailers fill a niche for buyers who cannot
find a private breeder with puppies available in their community or surrounding
area and those who do not want to wait for a puppy from a responsible in-home
breeder.
Consumers who choose to get a puppy from a pet store should
carefully assess its health, obtain the AWA license number to make sure the
puppy comes from a regulated kennel, and ask to see the registration papers
with the OFA hip clearance and CERF eye clearance noted for sire and dam if
appropriate for the breed. Consumers should also visit the AKC website for
information on the breeds they are considering. Note: AKC national breed clubs
set the breed standard for their breeds and maintain useful information about
the character, exercise requirements and health issues relevant to each breed.
Other registries simply copy AKC's work product, including its breed standards
because they lack the knowledge base, breed authorities, infrastructure,
traditions and history necessary to create original source materials or make
meaningful recommendations. While it is difficult for a novice to compare a
puppy with the breed standard for an adult dog, potential buyers can compare
pictures from breed books with the puppies and can look for obvious deviations.
For example, an Akita puppy should have a thick plush coat, heavy bone, a
curled tail and brown eyes, even as a puppy.
Pet stores are not all the same. Some sell only local puppies,
provide educational material for pet owners, and help place unwanted puppies in
new homes. Some offer space to humane societies for adoptable dogs and cats.
Many offer limited warranties and are willing to take back puppies that don't
turn out. Some belong to PIJAC and send their employees to the association's
animal-handling seminars.
Other pet stores pay little or no attention to social problems
that relate to pet breeding and pet population dynamics. They provide few
educational resources to their buyers and do not recommend training or
neutering the puppies they sell and offer little support to purchasers once the
sale is complete.
Regardless of how progressive and socially responsible a given
pet store may be, an argument against purchasing pet store puppies is that
prospective buyers cannot see the parent dogs or the conditions in which the
puppies were produced and reared, the same argument used against purchasing
puppies from magazine or Internet ads.
Puppy mills are substandard breeding operations run by people
with little concern for the welfare of their puppies or their breeding stock.
Medical care is scarce; socialization and good nutrition are non-existent.
Puppy mill dogs are typically in poor condition and live in kennels that are
rundown and filthy. Dogs may be confined to small cages like rabbit hutches;
puppies may be raised or displayed in shopping carts. When AKC inspectors find
such kennels, they suspend registration privileges of the owners and report the
conditions to area authorities. When USDA inspectors come across such kennels
that sell puppies to pet stores or to other commercial kennels, they use the
federal Animal Welfare Act to suspend or revoke licenses and assess fines.
(Links to the AWA and AWA regulations can be found at the APHIS
publications page at www.aphis.usda.gov/ac/publications.html)
The entire commercial dog breeding industry and even hobbyists
are tainted by the existence of puppy mills. Anti-breeding zealots find kennels
with squalid conditions, get the media interested, and paint all commercial
breeders and pet stores that buy from commercial kennels with the same brush in
press releases, articles, and fund-raising campaigns. Anti puppy mill campaigns
target all commercial breeders regardless of their standards. They use the
existence of such kennels to promote mandatory spay and neuter bills and other
anti-breeder legislation. They also use these campaigns to promote shelter dogs
instead of well-bred and well-socialized puppies.
NAIA joins those who condemn puppy mills and urges that they be
reported to the authorities when they are located. If these kennels sell
AKC-registered puppies, they should be reported to AKC. If they sell puppies to
pet stores, they should be reported to USDA. If they are present in a state
that regulates commercial kennels, they should also be reported to state
officials. NAIA works for the closure of all puppy mills.
Few states have kennel licensing and inspections programs because
few states are home to large numbers of commercial kennels that produce a high
volume of animals for sale as pets. NAIA notes that states without such
programs can nonetheless protect the well being of animals in large kennels by
judicious enforcement of reasonable animal welfare laws and by prohibiting
habitual offenders from owning large numbers of animals in the future.
Last updated November 17, 2008.