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Andalusian
Horse Breeding > Breeding
Spanish Horses
Inbreeding in the Andalusian Horse Breed
by Donna DeYoung, Pure Spanish (PRE) Andalusian Horse Breeder
The
breeder can approach his or her breeding theme in many different ways. He can
breed like animals to like, similar family trees to similar, or unlike to
unlike.
Outcrossing uses different, unrelated lines, to produce a foal. An outcross is
defined as “the mating of animals that are members of the same breed but which
show no relationships close up in the pedigree."
Often times, outcrossing is most successful when the outcross stallion is a
strongly linebred individual. This ensures that the stallion will “stamp” his
offspring with similar characteristics.
If, for example, you take a band of unrelated mares and outcross them to a
linebred stallion, the resulting foals should resemble each other more than the
mares do.
The ultimate goal then becomes the search to find a stallion that “nicks” with
these first generation fillies.
Successful nicking occurs when the right combinations of genes are brought
together through each parent and when these genes complement each other.
Outcrossing can be conducted in the United States by Andalusian breeders if and
only if they breed US lines to Spanish lines. Or newly imported Spanish lines to
other Spanish lines. The original US lines and some of the older Spanish lines
are too closely related to be considered an outcross when bred to each other.
For example, if you bred a Garrison horse (early American lines) to a newly
imported Spanish line – that would be an outcross. Or if you bred a Denham horse
(recent Spanish imports) to a California-bred horse with older Mexican lines –
that would be an outcross.
Linebreeding is “.. is the mating of animals... usually directed toward keeping
the offspring closely related to some highly admired ancestor, such as
half-brother and half-sister, female and grandsire, and cousins."
Linebreeding is built upon the principle of breeding like to like. The greatest
danger in linebreeding is that all genes are intensified – the good AND the bad.
In line-breeding, you, as a breeder, will find out what is good and what is bad
about your program in a short amount of time.
Linebreeding is frequently practiced in Spain – mainly because of the small pool
of horses from which to draw and the popularity of certain lines. For example,
nearly all military lines are line-bred. They can trace back to Maluso, Agente,
Ebano, etc. who also trace back to similar ancestors. Most established breeders,
or recognized names in Spain, are built upon linebreeding. One only needs to
study the pedigrees to see lines of influence.
In the U.S., linebreeding is more common in the older American lines – and these
were linebred because they were imported as linebred. Most breeders today have a
variety of stock to choose from, and the close relatives of their horses are not
linebred – but outcrosses.
Inbreeding is an intensified form of linebreeding. Inbreeding affords the
quickest and safest way of setting a specific trait within a breed. It also
certaining INCREASES the numbers of undesirable breeding stock – when faults
combine with faults. Inbreeding is most easily recognized when a half-sister is
bred to a half-brother. Or a stallion is bred to his daughter’s offspring. Some
breeders have put themselves in a rut with linebreeding because they have
selected to breed their mares to a stallion that is closely related. And they
choose not to outcross to other horses.
Seemingly, these breeders are trying to force the positive factors of their
mares and stallions together and avoid what they see as negative traits in other
sires. What they don’t realize is, that they are making things worse by not
outcrossing. Half-brothers and siblings bred to each other, or stallions with
the same female line as the mares you are breeding to, will double up on the
positive traits as well as the bad traits. It’s true, you may get some super
horses from inbreeding – but you will also get a large number of culls.
An example of an inbred horse is a mare that is bred to her half-brother. The
mare and stallion share the same sire line, but different dam lines. This is
somewhat acceptable inbreeding if the breeder has matched up the sire and dam
correctly.
Another type of inbreeding is where the lines of both the mare and stallion
converge into the same grandparents. This type of inbreeding is worse, where
both the top and bottom are similar. Because there is no variety in the dam
line, thus, the negative traits will tend to appear more often.
My suggestion is that you stay away from inbred horses – unless you know exactly
what you are getting.
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