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Dew claw removal
Dew claw removal












US breeders can help foreign breeders by recording and sharing information with them on rear dewclaws that may be present in their lines. However, CBRs are sold to buyers and being bred in countries where removing rear dewclaws is an issue. Prior to these laws being enacted in other countries, breeders had no real reason to record information on puppies born with rear dews. As breeding stock is much more limited outside the US, this becomes a concern for foreign CBR fanciers. CBRs with rear dewclaws present are disqualified under the FCI Standard and may not be able to obtain this certification in countries that specifically prohibit dewclaw removal. National purebred dog registries in many foreign countries require conformation certification from a qualified judge before a dog or bitch can be bred or any litters registered. Rear dewclaws are a disqualification according to the ACC (and FCI) official breed Standard.Rear dewclaw removal is illegal in some countries outside the US.If such laws are ever approved, the ACC would likely be mandated to revise our breed Standard.

dew claw removal

Groups in the US are lobbying for similar bans of cropping, docking, and dewclaw removal. In some countries, removal is only permitted if it becomes medically necessary for trauma or therapeutic reasons. In the United Kingdom, removal of dewclaws is permitted without anesthesia only if the puppy’s eyes have not opened, or with anesthesia (only by a licensed veterinarian) if eyes have opened. For example, in Canada a number of provinces have banned the procedures, and the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association has stated (2018) they are formally opposed. Other countries vary widely in their laws regulating, or outright prohibiting, docking, cropping, and the removal of both front and rear dewclaws. Great Britain has no disqualifications included in their version and no mention of dewclaws at all. Canada has only six disqualifications, with the rear dewclaw DQ eliminated. Canada and Great Britain have written their own Chesapeake Bay Retriever Standard based on the ACC version. CBRs shown in conformation classes in these countries are held to this Standard. So, why is this a concern? The American Chesapeake Club is the authority over the official AKC Standard which is used not only in the USA, but also in countries governed by the FCI (Federation Cynologique Internationale). In the United States, CBRs with dewclaws removed are allowed in the conformation ring. In the upcoming breed health survey, the question of rear dewclaws will be addressed to have better information available about the prevalence in the breed and potential genetic transmission. Currently, there is no genetic testing available for the occurrence of rear dewclaws and no research planned for the future.

dew claw removal

The breed Standard makes no mention of removal of rear dewclaws being a disqualification, just that they should not be allowed, so it is near impossible to track anecdotally in adults. Puppy buyers or breeders in the US don’t usually think or find it necessary to ask about rear dewclaws in parents or past generations. The incidence of rear dewclaws and their mode of inheritance in Chesapeakes is relatively unknown, as most breeders and owners do not actively track or relate the occurrence. We need to retain these disqualifications, for anything that has previously been a problem in the breed can become one again if we do not keep alert and guard against it.”

dew claw removal

If they are now found only infrequently it is a tribute to the emphasis implied by the potential for disqualification. Janet Horn, in The New Complete Chesapeake Bay Retriever (1994, page 32), addresses all breed disqualifications in general and states: “The seven disqualifications in our Standard were first laid down in 1936, and at that time, I was told by one who had worked on the Standard Committee in the 1930s, these items were made disqualifications because they were serious problems in the breed. Reviewing past publications, there is little information about the intent behind rear dewclaw disqualification.

dew claw removal

Since 1963, DQ number three simply states: “Dewclaws on hind legs.” Dewclaws were given their own line and clarified to indicate rear only. The first AKC-approved Chesapeake Bay Retriever Standard in 1918 listed six disqualifications including “Dew claws, undershot, overshot, or any deformity.” This disqualification remained the same through the 1933 Standard revision, but in 1963, changes were approved and remain part of the current (1993) Standard.














Dew claw removal