A new genetic study involving more than 2,000 dogs and 200,000 survey answers from dog owners has revealed that a dog’s breed is a poor predictor of behaviour on its own, reports Phys.org.
The first-of-its-kind, peer-reviewed study – conducted by professors, students, and researchers at University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School – is set to appear this month in the journal Science.
The major findings go against the popular beliefs that breed plays a role in how aggressive, obedient, or affectionate a dog can be. Those stereotypes can prompt breed-specific legislation, insurance restrictions, and home bans for some dog breeds, including pit bulls and German shepherds.
“Despite these widely held assumptions, there is a stark lack of genetic research illustrating a link between breed and behaviour,” the study’s authors write.
The study’s authors used genome-wide association studies to search for common genetic variations that could predict specific behavioral traits in 2,155 purebred and mixed-breed dogs. They combined this data with 18,385 pet-owner surveys from Darwin’s Ark, an open-source database of owner-reported canine traits and behaviours.
The results of these tests, which included data from 78 breeds, identified 11 genetic loci strongly associated with behaviour. Yet none of these was specific to breed. According to the findings, breed only explains 9% of the behavioral variation in individual dogs. Age and dog gender were the best predictors of behaviour.
“The majority of behaviours that we think of as characteristics of specific modern dog breeds have most likely come about from thousands of years of evolution from wolf to wild canine to domesticated dog, and finally to modern breeds,” author Elinor Karlsson said in a news release. “These heritable traits predate our concept of modern dog breeds by thousands of years.”
https://phys.org/news/2022-04-good-dog-bad-isnt-predictor.html