TinysMom
Well-Known Member
I have a situation here and I'm trying to decide what to do about something.
First of all, a bit about me. Whenever I find that a rabbit carries something like malocclusion or the Max Factor gene or whatever - I pull it from my herd along with any offspring. If anyone has purchased any offspring for breeding - I would notify them.
I've only had to pull two rabbits for malocclusion and they were sold as pets as they were carriers only. I still have their offspring that had problems here and trim their teeth regularly.
That is my policy because I don't want to sell anything that would hurt another breeders' herd. To me, there's nothing worse than buying a rabbit or two to breed and then find out that there are problems genetically with them and you can't use them.
Well - I'm getting ready to retire Miss Bea. I wanted her to have one more litter and I was going to take her to a very "typey" tort buck so that I would get lots of harlequins even if they would be tort and black like her - and not orange and black.
Last night I was checking my email and a breeder who bought from me last year said that he had to put her son down and two of the son's offspring...for malocclusion. He stated that he thought it came from the son's father (a sort of well known lionhead rabbit in the early years but I am not going to name him here). The buck he had to put down was about 18 months old and he said that when he thought back on it - he thought he probably had the malocclusion showing for about 4 months because he'd had a weepy eye problem.
I've been doing some correspondence with this breeder and he's read over 70 books on rabbit breeding (I have no idea how he found so much)and rabbit health. He's a really nice guy - and I've always found him to be ethical...so I really don't doubt him.
Now - the rabbit he suspects is the culprit - is in Miss Bea's pedigree- but as the grandsire. He is also the sire of the rabbit he had to put down. The doe that threw the litter with maloccluded teeth - is if I understand - the daughter of the buck he had to put down. To me - this says that she could have gotten the gene from the dad...
Now - I went out and checked all of my harlequins - and none of them(and some are about 3 months younger than this buck) have bad teeth.Miss Bea does not have bad teeth and I've never ever heard of her offspring other than this one buck from her having bad teeth...which the young man suspects came from the father and not Miss Bea. The sire is a direct import from England...and it was known that many imports carried teeth issues.
My question:
a. Would you pull Miss Bea from the breeding line or would you breed her one last time? To my knowledge - this is the only rabbit that ever had malocclusion - but if he truly has it...then that would mean she carries it - right?
b. Should I breed my other bucks and does from her? Or should I just pet them out?
This decision is pretty important. I've been told by many that Miss Bea is about one fo the nicest patterned harlequin lionheads in the US.....I wanted to preserve her pattern and her lines. But I don't want to do it at the expense of passing on the maloclussion gene.
I've quietly made a few inquiries about the sire - if anyone else had issues from his offspring....but I really wonder now about her carrying it.
My option is - if I were to breed her again - to just pet out the babies and not use them for breeding..but the whole purpose was to keep her line from dying out.
Ethics is VERY important to me - and I suspect I may wind up not breeding her again...
Peg
First of all, a bit about me. Whenever I find that a rabbit carries something like malocclusion or the Max Factor gene or whatever - I pull it from my herd along with any offspring. If anyone has purchased any offspring for breeding - I would notify them.
I've only had to pull two rabbits for malocclusion and they were sold as pets as they were carriers only. I still have their offspring that had problems here and trim their teeth regularly.
That is my policy because I don't want to sell anything that would hurt another breeders' herd. To me, there's nothing worse than buying a rabbit or two to breed and then find out that there are problems genetically with them and you can't use them.
Well - I'm getting ready to retire Miss Bea. I wanted her to have one more litter and I was going to take her to a very "typey" tort buck so that I would get lots of harlequins even if they would be tort and black like her - and not orange and black.
Last night I was checking my email and a breeder who bought from me last year said that he had to put her son down and two of the son's offspring...for malocclusion. He stated that he thought it came from the son's father (a sort of well known lionhead rabbit in the early years but I am not going to name him here). The buck he had to put down was about 18 months old and he said that when he thought back on it - he thought he probably had the malocclusion showing for about 4 months because he'd had a weepy eye problem.
I've been doing some correspondence with this breeder and he's read over 70 books on rabbit breeding (I have no idea how he found so much)and rabbit health. He's a really nice guy - and I've always found him to be ethical...so I really don't doubt him.
Now - the rabbit he suspects is the culprit - is in Miss Bea's pedigree- but as the grandsire. He is also the sire of the rabbit he had to put down. The doe that threw the litter with maloccluded teeth - is if I understand - the daughter of the buck he had to put down. To me - this says that she could have gotten the gene from the dad...
Now - I went out and checked all of my harlequins - and none of them(and some are about 3 months younger than this buck) have bad teeth.Miss Bea does not have bad teeth and I've never ever heard of her offspring other than this one buck from her having bad teeth...which the young man suspects came from the father and not Miss Bea. The sire is a direct import from England...and it was known that many imports carried teeth issues.
My question:
a. Would you pull Miss Bea from the breeding line or would you breed her one last time? To my knowledge - this is the only rabbit that ever had malocclusion - but if he truly has it...then that would mean she carries it - right?
b. Should I breed my other bucks and does from her? Or should I just pet them out?
This decision is pretty important. I've been told by many that Miss Bea is about one fo the nicest patterned harlequin lionheads in the US.....I wanted to preserve her pattern and her lines. But I don't want to do it at the expense of passing on the maloclussion gene.
I've quietly made a few inquiries about the sire - if anyone else had issues from his offspring....but I really wonder now about her carrying it.
My option is - if I were to breed her again - to just pet out the babies and not use them for breeding..but the whole purpose was to keep her line from dying out.
Ethics is VERY important to me - and I suspect I may wind up not breeding her again...
Peg