Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund

The Norwegian Lundehund is a prehistoric small type spitz dog originating from the North of Norway on an island called Værøy. Here the breed was used for hunting the small puffin bird. The dog serves its purpose excellently by having some special anatomical characteristics like hypermobile joints ma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harvik, Ragnhild
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10832/300
id ftszentistvanufv:oai:www.huveta.hu:10832/300
record_format openpolar
spelling ftszentistvanufv:oai:www.huveta.hu:10832/300 2024-09-15T18:40:27+00:00 Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund Harvik, Ragnhild http://hdl.handle.net/10832/300 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10832/300 B-9486 Kutyatenyésztés Kutya Vadászkutya Génbank Zöldág László (supervisor) Dog breeding Dogs Hunting dog Gene reserves Thesis ftszentistvanufv 2024-08-01T03:00:53Z The Norwegian Lundehund is a prehistoric small type spitz dog originating from the North of Norway on an island called Værøy. Here the breed was used for hunting the small puffin bird. The dog serves its purpose excellently by having some special anatomical characteristics like hypermobile joints making them able to maneuver in the smallest spaces, extra toes on all feet for better grip on the rocky mountains and extremely movable cartilage within the ear, making it possible for them to close the ear completely and thereby protecting them from dirt and sand falling into it. The breed is believed to be as old as 1000 years, but today breed all descends from five remaining dogs from 1961 after the breed almost had become extinct three times. As a result of this, the breed has long had a high inbreeding as there have been very few individuals to choose from in the breeding program. Today we estimate that there are 1000 individuals of Lundehunds worldwide, where 500 lives in Norway. This lively and unique dog is predisposed to a series of gastrointestinal diseases named “Lundehund Syndrome”. The most prominent clinical signs are intermittent diarrhea, vomiting, weight loss, ascites and subcutaneous edema in the hind legs. The most common cause of the disease is Chronic gastritis and Intestinal lymphangiectasia (IL). There is also a high prevalence of gastric carcinoma. There are strong indications that IL has a genetic background, and similar diseases found in humans like Crohn’s disease supports this theory. It is also speculated if there is a link between the polydactyly found in the breed and the gastrointestinal disturbances as there are many evidences of polydactyly exerting a negative pleiotropic effect on other parts of the body. As many as 100% of Lundehunds might be affected clinically or sub clinically with a type of gastrointestinal disturbance. This is very high, and research is being done on the field to find a genetic marker predisposing the Lundehunds for IL. In addition to this, a high inbreeding ... Thesis Værøy HuVetA - Hungarian Veterinary Archive
institution Open Polar
collection HuVetA - Hungarian Veterinary Archive
op_collection_id ftszentistvanufv
language English
topic Kutyatenyésztés
Kutya
Vadászkutya
Génbank
Zöldág László (supervisor)
Dog breeding
Dogs
Hunting dog
Gene reserves
spellingShingle Kutyatenyésztés
Kutya
Vadászkutya
Génbank
Zöldág László (supervisor)
Dog breeding
Dogs
Hunting dog
Gene reserves
Harvik, Ragnhild
Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund
topic_facet Kutyatenyésztés
Kutya
Vadászkutya
Génbank
Zöldág László (supervisor)
Dog breeding
Dogs
Hunting dog
Gene reserves
description The Norwegian Lundehund is a prehistoric small type spitz dog originating from the North of Norway on an island called Værøy. Here the breed was used for hunting the small puffin bird. The dog serves its purpose excellently by having some special anatomical characteristics like hypermobile joints making them able to maneuver in the smallest spaces, extra toes on all feet for better grip on the rocky mountains and extremely movable cartilage within the ear, making it possible for them to close the ear completely and thereby protecting them from dirt and sand falling into it. The breed is believed to be as old as 1000 years, but today breed all descends from five remaining dogs from 1961 after the breed almost had become extinct three times. As a result of this, the breed has long had a high inbreeding as there have been very few individuals to choose from in the breeding program. Today we estimate that there are 1000 individuals of Lundehunds worldwide, where 500 lives in Norway. This lively and unique dog is predisposed to a series of gastrointestinal diseases named “Lundehund Syndrome”. The most prominent clinical signs are intermittent diarrhea, vomiting, weight loss, ascites and subcutaneous edema in the hind legs. The most common cause of the disease is Chronic gastritis and Intestinal lymphangiectasia (IL). There is also a high prevalence of gastric carcinoma. There are strong indications that IL has a genetic background, and similar diseases found in humans like Crohn’s disease supports this theory. It is also speculated if there is a link between the polydactyly found in the breed and the gastrointestinal disturbances as there are many evidences of polydactyly exerting a negative pleiotropic effect on other parts of the body. As many as 100% of Lundehunds might be affected clinically or sub clinically with a type of gastrointestinal disturbance. This is very high, and research is being done on the field to find a genetic marker predisposing the Lundehunds for IL. In addition to this, a high inbreeding ...
format Thesis
author Harvik, Ragnhild
author_facet Harvik, Ragnhild
author_sort Harvik, Ragnhild
title Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund
title_short Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund
title_full Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund
title_fullStr Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund
title_full_unstemmed Current Breeding status of the Norwegian Lundehund
title_sort current breeding status of the norwegian lundehund
url http://hdl.handle.net/10832/300
genre Værøy
genre_facet Værøy
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10832/300
B-9486
_version_ 1810484758257336320