Due to selective breeding for physical traits, the Bulldog has become so inbred it cannot be returned to health without an infusion of new bloodlines, a genetic study suggests.
Among other problems, English bulldogs have difficulty breathing, moving and mating. These traits are a result of how the dogs were selectively bred to promote characteristics like its shortened muzzle and stature. Decades of heavy inbreeding have caused further problems, including autoimmune diseases and allergies, the New Scientist reported, quoting a study that appears in the journal Canine Genetics and Epidemiology.
"If you want to re-build the breed, these are the building blocks you have, but they're very few. So if you're using the same old bricks, you're not going to be able to build a new house," Davis told the BBC.
The English Bulldog breed - also known as the British Bulldog - has a long-standing cultural association with the UK, but is also sought after worldwide because of its child- like appearance and gentle temperament.
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But the analysis found they had very low levels of diversity resulting from a small initial pool of founding dogs, followed by so-called bottlenecks, caused by selective breeding for "desirable" traits like the short nose, which have further reduced variety in the Bulldog gene pool.
"The fastest way to get genetic diversity is to outcross to a breed that looks similar but is genetically distinct... Trying to manipulate diversity from within a breed if it doesn't have much anyway is really very difficult," Pedersen said.
Breeders differ widely on what should be done to tackle the illnesses. Some argue that any deviation from the breed's standards would no longer make it an English Bulldog.
Others argue that the English Bulldog has constantly evolved over the centuries and favour the introduction of new genetic material, known as outcrossing.
One candidate mentioned in the research paper is the Olde English Bulldogge, a 1970s attempt by an American breeder to recreate the healthier working bulldog that existed in England during the early 1800s.