3
The third, analytic tactic excludes from breeding the dogs with hidden recessive genes. Such dogs are not ill themselves but hold potential recessive harmful genes (aA,) which result in producing ill dogs in next generations. The semi-ill dogs are detected by applying the methods discussed above in this paper.
These charts are for illustration purposes only. The exact comparison of the figures is not possible, because simulating populations with different rules for finding mates unpredictably affects the dynamics of population growth. And they ultimately turn out into two quite different populations. Also it wouldn’t be legitimate to analyze the population growth asymptotically, because the number of dogs is essentially finite and limited. At most 10,000 dogs seem quite a reasonable number. Figure 6 shows proportions of ill dogs in the populations ruled by tactics two and three as 0.053 and 0.036 correspondingly. This looks like a certain success.
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