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Uhm.. all death dogs are marked with a red X at the side of their name. But I wonder if will be possible to pass this information also for the statistics in the easy way.
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Yeah difficult, I would need an access to the database to add it.
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What worries me a little bit is that I discovered that almost all dogs, even in the last years, have a COI, measured on ALL generations, of about 20% or higher.
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There are even COI of 40%, 50%, 60% on less than 8 generations, which is really crazy. AVK is also very informative.
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I wonder if it could be possible to measure the COI of all dogs born in year X measured on all generations? It might be very interesting to discover whether the COI measured on ALL generations in recent years is reduced and to what extent.
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I actually can't, the code is too slow, I need to switch to more efficient calculation method.
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Can you add a search, who find out where the most dogs in a country come original from?
For example in France: are the most in foreign countrys bought dogs from Czech Republik or Slovakia or maybe Italy?
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I added this in "Find dogs living in country:" ,you have now a new field "Dogs from:".
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Plus there are always changes in the genome in the form of mutations, deletions, duplications etc. So after some number of generations these changes may have larger effect than the relatedness of the animals.
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And epigenetic modifications are transmissibles... but I don't know the rate of apparition/transmission.
For the future, I think dog's mean kinship coefficient would be one of the very important coefficient to take into account when one choose how many time to reproduce a dog. I cannot provide this coefficient in real time in the tool because it would require long time of calculation for each dog, but I maybe could do it offline, then add it in the DB.