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Does Denver Know A Pit Bull When It Sees One?


RottnBullies
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Does Denver know a pit bull when it sees one?

pitornot.JPGThe city of Denver's faulty logic just got proven even faultier.

As if the city's ban on pit bulls, which has led to hundreds of dogs being put to death, weren't ill-advised enough, there's this: Apparently even experts can't correctly identify a pit bull visually.

Denver Post columnist Bill Johnson took part in experiment this week , along with about two dozen animal-shelter directors, volunteers, dog trainers and others. They viewed 20 dogs on videotape and were asked to identify each one — whether it was purebred of mixed and, if the latter, what it was a mixture of.

Johnson got the breed correct one time, and the professionals didn't fare much better.

The breed identification study was administered by Victoria L. Voith, a professor of animal behavior in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Western University in Pomona in California.

Shelter workers, she explained, are generally 75 percent wrong when they list or tell you the breed of a dog. The only sure-fire way of knowing, she said, is DNA testing, which most shelters don't use.

"Visual identification simply is not in high agreement with DNA analysis," Voith said. "Dogs in Denver may be dying needlessly," she said.

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