Artificial selection is the process of changing the characteristics of animals by artificial means. For example, animal breeders are often able to change the characteristics of domestic animals by selecting for reproduction those individuals with the most desirable qualities such as speed in racehorses, milk production in cows, trail scenting in dogs. Artificial selection can also be unintentional. It is thought that domestication of crops by early humans was largely unintentional.
Charles Darwin first utilized this term in contrast to natural selection. He noted that many domesticated animals and plants had special properties that were developed by intentionally encouraging the breeding potential of individuals who both possessed desirable characteristics, and discouraging the breeding of individuals who had less desirable characteristics.
Natural selection is the process by which heritable traits that make it more likely for an organism to survive and successfully reproduce become more common in a population over successive generations. Artificial selection is the exact same process but with inteference from outside factors, such as human intervention.
Artificial selection results into inbreeding, and inbreeding holds potential problems. The limited gene pool caused by continued inbreeding means that harmful genes become widespread and the breed loses productivity. Any negative physical traits and health disorders get locked in. Inbreeding leads to animals or plants that are so genetically identical that they can be considered clones. This does not ensure variation. Without variation species are more prone to diseases and natural disasters, thus the potential to the endangerment and extinction is very high. If a selective breed was put into a situation, i.e. isolation, the founder effect can occur. Even if the slightest amount of the population contained a ‘bad’ gene or mutation its predecessors are more likely to inherit that gene, and if it is harmful it can lead to endangerment and/or extinction. Inbreeding and artificial selection are forms of genetic engineering. The processes involved the moving of genes that nature had never intended or had an inability to do so, this can lead to unexpected consequences. Genetic engineering can have devistating and irreversible effects. The effects can take years to show up and even if they do, it may be irreversible and nothing can be done about it. Genetic engineering (artificial selection/inbreeding) can have harmful and irreversible effects that can lead to the endangerment and even exticntion of species.
German shepherd was pure bred for herding sheep and protecting flocks from predators. But modern careless breeding has promoted disease and other defects.
The aftermath of the process can be very harmful to the animals/plants as well. An example of this are the genetically altered chickens. These chickens are bred to grow faster and much bigger than their feral ancestors, also these chickens produce no feathers, this is done to reduce time on processing the chicken to the consumer’s dinner table (feathering), this in turn makes the chickens more prone to viral infections and diseases.
There is a reason why artificial selection is an acceptable practice, it is that they are promoting the more desirable genes and in turn creating a more healthy population. Artificial selection can remove dangerous and unhealthy genes from the population, granted that the ancestral population did not have any harmful genes. Artificial selection in plants can lead to new plant-types that may posses medical and pharmaceutical advantages. All the desirbale traits of the species are present and that can ensure the reproductivity and well-being of the species. Breeds can be specified to do a job with great efficiency and productivity.
The bloodhound is a large breed of dog that was bred originally to hunt deer and wild boar, later specifically to track human beings by scent.
Other than the fact that selective breeding has phenotypic and some genetic advantages, the genes of the species that are genetically altered can have dier consequences. It is mother nature’s job to select which traits are suppose to be inherited, not ours. We are playing the role of mother nature when we practice inbreeding and genetic engineering. These processes can have harmful effects and we have no one to blame but ourselves.
Work Cited
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"The German Shepherd Dog in Word and Picture -." Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Web. 25 Jan. 2010.
"Individual Breed Results for Purebred Dog Health Survey - The Kennel Club." The home for dog owners and those working with dogs - The Kennel Club. Web. 25 Jan. 2010.
"PROS AND CONS OF INBREEDING DOGS, Inbreeding Dogs." Dog Breed Info Center. Web. 25 Jan. 2010.
"Pros and Cons of Mutations." THE MESSYBEAST. Web. 25 Jan. 2010.