Talk:Akita (dog breed)/Archive 1

Nature
This section seems unusually short and completely one-sided. Also, the reference being noted doesn't indicate any acts of agression by Akitas towards children. In fact, this statement is in direct contrast to much of the information about akita's which states they are quite good with children. And while Akita's can be aggressive towards other dogs, most dog breeds can as well. One article on the internet does not define the breed.

I think someone needs to do a more thorough job of describing the nature of this breed. I would, but don't have any good references to support it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.232.77.130 (talk) 01:45, 5 October 2008 (UTC)

I agree. I added some info myself. I'm 14 and my Akita is playful with all children, old or new. --Mokoniki (talk) 15:55, 28 May 2009 (UTC)Mokoniki

OJ Simpson trial
I've added information about Nicole Brown Simpson's pet Akita Kato in the trivia section. His bloody pawprints were a key piece of evidence in the "trial of the century", making him the most famous member of his breed in the mid 1990's. I think that's worthy of mention in this article. --M.Neko 07:56, 21 September 2006 (UTC)


 * Completely irrelevant, and only speaks of a need to glamorize this article with random fluff. 192.206.151.130 (talk) 14:26, 8 July 2008 (UTC)

farm labour
My Japanese friend had one of these dogs and told me they were often used to pull carts because they were very strong and had a lot of torque. Is there any truth to this?
 * Could be. I saw two Akitas pulling a cart in this Akita dog book I own. Mokoniki (talk) 21:41, 17 June 2009 (UTC)Mokoniki

photos
Need photos. There are some on this foreign language site but I have no idea whether license is any good. Elf | Talk 20:25, 11 Aug 2004 (UTC)

We are trying to have each dog breed article conform to the following standards: each has a table and each will have the sections appearance, temperament, health, history and trivia in that order. For more on this please seeWikiProject Dog breeds and WikiProject Dog breeds/General

Can somebody please try to find images of the most common colors of the Akita, like the dark face with light brown back and white paws and under belly. Thanks. Kgreg10 —Preceding unsigned comment added by Kgreg10 (talk • contribs) 07:29, 15 February 2009 (UTC)

Misnomer
I am not involved in the dog world, but I do know Japanese. Referring to this breed as "Akita Inu" is strange. The word "inu" does mean "dog" in Japanese, but that's not what this breed is called in Japanese--it's called "Akita-ken" ("ken" also means "dog" in this context--in fact, it's written with the same Chinese character). "Akita Inu" comes across as if it is trying to sound Japanese and failing.

I just checked the AKC's website, and they just call it "Akita", which frankly strikes me as better for English audiences. If "Akita Inu" really is accepted usage among dog breeders, then pardon the interruption. adamrice 14:07, 15 Apr 2005 (UTC)


 * Ack, you just HAD to mention this, didn't you! :-) Yes, "Akita Inu" is commonly used although it's not the official breed name anywhere that I know of. After poking around a bit, I discovered not only that Akita is the name specified in our master list, and I'll move this article appropriately (it'll have to be Akita (dog) because the main name is a major DAB), but also that there are TWO breeds of Akita (although not all kennel clubs recognize them as separate... I think... more research coming...): The Japanese Akita or just Akita, and the American Akita or Great Japanese Dog.  So now this needs rewriting, reorganizing, blah blah and i just wanted to check copyedits. :-)  To inifinity...and beyond... Elf | Talk 22:42, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)
 * Oh, Adam, wer really appreciate your bringing this up (cough, cough, splutter). No, seriously, we do.
 * AFAIK, "Akita Inu" was the old term, the 'Inu' has been dropped on the basis that that's like saying Akita Dog Dog. (Course, that doesn't explain the Shiba Inu, now does it?) Another candidate for that section we need to write on "inconsitent and capricious nomenclature", Elf.
 * I just looked at the English and Japanese writeups for the Akita and Shiba breeds. Although I've never heard a breed referred to in spoken Japanese as X-inu, only X-ken, the Japanese entries for both those breeds show both X-ken and X-inu as readings for the breed names, to my own surprise. Akita is a place name (I think Shiba is too), btw, same as, oh, Dalmatia. The dogs are named after the places.


 * I'm going to check out if the JKC has any suggestions, when I have a mo....
 * Quill 23:08, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)


 * Links I had to JKC site in English no longer work. Quill 23:29, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)

I have also never heard of "Akita Inu," only "Akita-ken" (especially when referring to the dog Hachiko) in spoken Japanese. However when I looked it up in 大辞林辞典, there was an entry for akita-inu but none for akita-ken. Surprise, surprise. —Tokek 22:58, 6 August 2005 (UTC)

Every Japanese person I've met from outside of Akita prefecture reads it as "akita ken". Within Akita prefecture, I found a mix of "ken" and "inu" as the reading when spoken, about 50/50. In and around Odate City, everyone used "akita inu". (Although in the local dialect, the pronunciation of akita inu actually comes out sounding more like "aksain".) In addition, every written reference to the pronunciation I've found gives the reading as "inu". My own conclusion is that "akita inu" is the historically correct reading, but "akita ken" is far more common over most of Japan. Azamiryou 19:57, 15 August 2006 (UTC)

inu and ken are the same kanji meaning dog. akita + inu = akita ken. shiba + inu = shiba inu. the reading of the second kanji changes according to the preceding kanji that is being connected to it.

In most words, the reading of a character changes depending on the preceding character. In the case of Akita Inu or Akita Ken, the reading changes depending on where the speaker learned Japanese. In the region these dogs are from, the name of the breed is Akita Inu. Elsewhere in Japan, the same three kanji are read Akita Ken. Even though the majority of Japanese people believe the correct reading is "ken", every written Japanese resource I've found on the breed gives the reading as "inu". If you need a source, how about the Akita Preservation Society in Odate? Check their web site, http://www.akitainu-hozonkai.com/index.html. If you can read hiragana, you'll find the pronunciation on the site. Even if you can't, you can look at the URL and see it's "inu".


 * The term "Akita Inu" may be used in conversation in Hakodate but it just means "akita dog" ... it is not the name of the breed. I agree with the original comment by adamrice that it sounds like someone trying to sound authentically Japanese and getting it wrong. The Akita is the Akita, just like the Alsatian is the Alsatian. It is a dog of course but that's a description of it and not part of its breed name. This nonsense seems to have gone further with the Shiba and actually become part of the breed name.--DerivMan (talk) 11:15, 9 August 2008 (UTC)


 * Akita inu/秋田犬/あきたいぬ or あきたけん is the most commonly used noun for the dog in Japan. The result of 秋田犬 (Akita inu) G serch is this. Just the Akita search is this and see the most dog images have the word dog/犬 in the caption. There are many Akitas in Japan. Oda Mari (talk) 06:11, 10 August 2008 (UTC)

You find the same thing with the German Shepherd which is often referred to as 'German Shepherd Dog' (even in the Wikipedia article's title). Perhaps this is to differentiate from German people who herd sheep? Probably the same thing is happening with 'Akita' since it is both a place name and the name of a dog coming from that place. 199.166.186.1 (talk)mandersen

Well, I'm Japanese, so let me explain. In Japan, we put -ken at the end of a dog breed name, as sort of a title. the character "犬" is pronounced ken when it is attached to other kanji,however in terms of shiba inu, people sometimes pronounce it shiba inu, sometimes shiba-ken. however many americans call it either akita inu or akita, so I think we could leave that alone.Sayotadashi (talk) 23:46, 25 May 2010 (UTC)

Renaming akita articles
Just want to point out that Inu is Japanese for dog. Akita Inu is a little weird. I am sure the Japanese page it was taken from uses it to disambiguated it from the prefecture of Akita. Do what you will with that. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 220.144.140.142 (talk) 18:08, 30 August 2008 (UTC)

Here's what I propose to do:


 * Move Akita Inu to Akita (dog) because the Inu form is not the official name in any registry. (Then of course fix all the redirects...)
 * yeah, good luck with that...Quill


 * Move the current content to Japanese Akita, since that's mostly what it seems to describe...
 * Change the Akita (dog) article to be basically a disambiguation page pointing to Japanese Akita whose breed name is mostly commonly either just Akita or Japanese Akita and to Great Japanese Dog, AKA American Akita.
 * Create at least a stub called Great Japanese Dog (per FCI naming & our master List of dog breeds) as a place holder because this is all so confusing. What's worse is that what AKC calls Akita is apparently = GJD, not Japanese Akita, which is what others mean when they refer to Akita.

Clear as mud? Yea/nay? Elf | Talk 22:54, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)
 * Works for me. The only problem I see is that last point, where the AKC calls the GJD the Akita?  Bears looking into (and no, I'm not volunteering!)
 * Quill 23:12, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Yo, i have some really good Akita pics but i dnt know how to put them on, all these other photos are not very good or clear to represent the breed. You should talk more about the american akita as well and include pics of those.

Bizarre missing chapter.
I was going to add the following content to the article, but as soon as I tried to update the page, the section vanished. If anyone can figure out how to plug the information in, please feel free:

Some of the health conditions known to affect this breed include:
 * Canine herpes, a strain of the Herpes virus that happens to affect canines;
 * Gastric dilitation volvulus (GDV), a condition associated with bloat;
 * Pemphigus, which causes the autoimmune system to attack the dog's skin (leading to pustules);
 * Progressive retinal atrophy (PRA), an adult-onset condition which gradual degeneration in the eye cells (i.e. rods & cones);
 * UveoDermatological Syndrome (UDS), known as Volt-Koyanagi-Harada disease in humans;
 * Sebaceous adenitis, an autoimmune condition which attacks and destroys the dog's sebaceous glands;


 * I don't know why it disappeared; I added this text to the article. Elf | Talk 07:39, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

american akita don't apear it the AKC or arba

Is the temperament section objective?
It seems to me that the current temperament section isn't very objective. For instance, it states that "One of the most famous things about Akitas is that they make people feel calm and relaxed so an Akita is an ideal dog if you have stress problems" but doesn't mention a reference. I'm not an Akita expert, but I do know a bit about dog breeds, and I've never heard of this. While it doesn't make any direct misstatements (to my knowledge) about how Akita are with other dogs and training, it seems to downplay it. Everything I've read (for instance, the dogbreedinfo.com entry on Akitas) has said that Akitas are very aggressive to dogs and other animals (not just dominant), and that they require firm training and are capable of being vicious without proper handling. Finally, it ends by saying "The loyalty and devotion displayed by an Akita is phenomenal. The typical pet Akita will follow you from room to room, yet has the uncanny ability not to be underfoot. Your Akita lives his life as if his only purpose is to protect you and spend time with you." I'm sure Akitas do enjoy spending time with and protecting their people, but this takes it to an extreme; and the sentence about an uncanny ability to not be underfoot is exagerated. I've seen young Akitas that are definitely underfoot.

It's from the Japanese article. Hachiko was a remarkably loyal dog— above and beyond any dog story I've heard before. That's what it comes from. The truth is the whole section rings of Japanese description. That said, I'm thinking you folks also might be conflating the Japanese breed with other breeds of Akita.

Anyways, this article seems to me to really play up the Akita's good traits and play down their bad traits. I think it would be great if someone who knows a lot about Akitas would revise it to be a little more objective in tone.

--Tempeste 16:49, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

It's from the Japanese article. Hachiko was a remarkably loyal dog— above and beyond any dog story I've heard before. That's what it comes from. The truth is the whole section rings of Japanese description. That said, I'm thinking you folks also might be conflating the Japanese breed with other breeds of Akita. (Jon) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 220.144.140.142 (talk) 18:16, 30 August 2008 (UTC)

"very laid back" is a very favourable thing to say about this dog. i've seen many newspaper reports documenting attacks other dogs. my sisters boyfriend also brought one round to our yard, and it knocked my grandma over, and would have done the same thing to me, had i been less steady on my feet

I'm not an expert on the subject, I have only had three. Essentially most of the traits listed I thought were fairly accurate although they are excessively dog aggressive in my opinion. I have had to break up more than one Akita fight that ended up in vet visits and a trip to the hospital. If they are well socialized this usually isn't a problem so long as they're leashed around strange dogs. There are anecdotal stories of how protective they are in the US, and I have found that for the most part these stories jibe with my own experiences. I will say that they can be a difficult breed to deal with and they seem to require a higher amount of "dog skill" than simillar breeds. Ctordtor 04:46, 15 December 2006 (UTC)

This section seems familiar to me, it seems to be very derivative of two books about Akitas that I have seen, both by the same author. It may be a copy-vio. As to never getting underfoot, our Akita has perfected the art of lying down in the most awkward place possible, just before you get there, eg in front of the fridge, unfront of the cooker etc. Her best trick is lying at the top of the stairs, and standing up just as you step over her. I believe that Akita really means in-the-way --Yendor1958 (talk) 08:34, 27 May 2008 (UTC)

The phrase 'Akitas are renowned as loyal dogs and also intelligent and because of their intelligence are easily bored' doesn't seem to agree with the article on dog intelligence here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Intelligence_of_Dogs which puts them at Average Working/Obedience Intelligence just barely above Fair Working/Obedience Intelligence. Not saying which is correct, just that the two articles don't line up. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 199.166.186.1 (talk) 15:55, 15 October 2009 (UTC)

Dangerous Dogs?
I looked at Akita after reading this article on the BBC news site:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/tees/6161389.stm

Maybe this article needs to be redrafted to say that in some instances these dogs can be dangerous rather than the wholly positive view on here. I'm not against these dogs but clearly their temperament as described on these pages is not objective and could be misleading for some potential owners. twitter 15:40, 8 December 2006 (UTC)


 * I've never owned an Akita, but from what I have witnessed they are extremely aggressive to other dogs, and there have been many documented cases where they have killed other dogs —particularly terriers, who tend to not back down in a fight but are obviously no match for a dog of an Akitas size and power — they are fighting dogs after all, so it is in their nature to be aggressive. I have added a small section about their aggression at the end of the article, as I couldnt see it anywhere else. There is possibly more that can be said though, such as their possible aggression to humans (as in twitters source above). I referenced the bit I added, but I think some of the other statements in the temperament section need to be sourced if they are to remain. The language should be altered slightly too as some of the statements seem to generalise too much and that can be misleading.Gungadin 01:14, 25 January 2007 (UTC)


 * I would like to chime in here also; I've owned 3 of the American Akitas, and the article struck me as pertaining only to the Modern Japanese Akita. From my understanding of the subject, starting after WWII the Japanese started efforts to "mellow out" Akita's, trying to breed out the aggressive tendencies and slightly reducing the overall size of the breed; the justification seems to be that they are trying to return to the spirit of the dog that was known before it was commonly used in dog fighting. the Arguments against have been that they are making up this ideal Akita from whole cloth, as the breed apparently went straight from being a Bear hunter & war dog straight into dog fights without any modification.
 * From what I've read, and I agree, is that the closest thing to a traditional, historical Akita is an American Akita; the modern Japanese Akita is the result of a concerted effort to restructure the breed so it will fit in to modern Japanese lifestyles better.
 * An American Akita is a total handfull; they are fiercely aggresive to anything that they feel is a threat to their family or their territory. You can socialize one at an early age so that they will be more tolerant of strange animals and people, but even if socialized heavily they are still extremely dangerous to anything they feel is a threat. The children a Akita is raised with will be completely safe in the dogs presence, but do not be surprised if your toddler starts crying because the Akita got nervous about the environment, and either drags the kid to a more controlled place, or knocks the child down; it is a BAD idea to leave kids with an Akita in a place where surprises in the form of strange animals or people may pop up.
 * As an example, my HEAVILY socialized Akita KoKo was being taken for a evening walk about 5 years ago by my wife; a German Shepherd was roaming the neighborhood, and started barking at KoKo; my wife reported that KoKo completely ignored the dog for a good while, until the dog came within the leash's reach behind her; KoKo turned, hopped(?) twice, grabbed the dog by the neck, shook him, there was a loud pop, the Shepherd was dead, KoKo returned to his position in front of her and sat calmly, waiting to start the walk again. He never even growled.
 * They need a lot of space, and they need exercise. Do not try to raise one in an apartment, although you could do it briefly. They need absolutely no training to be guard dogs, and I've seen discussions where sending them to guard dog training was disasterous.Paganize 07:57, 9 March 2007 (UTC)


 * FWIW, my Japanese-line akita is good with cats (we think because he was the non-dominant of a pair of brothers growing up, until 8 months or so when we got him) and with dogs that are either female, old, or smaller than he is, but he still has aggressive tendencies that make him a poor fit in most dog parks and other social contexts that involve mixed socialization of different kinds and breeds of dogs. While I agree that the Japanese lines are breeding for something different from the American lines, and the builds of the two branches are markedly different by now, and further that temperament of the Japanese lines is significantly less aggressive (I know a few American-line Akitas), I find myself puzzled by and unable to comment authoritatively on the larger goal of this thread - seemingly to determine whether either Japanese-line or American-line Akitas are more faithful to the original ideal of the breed. Mainly what causes me to question this assertion is, if the original bear-hunting Akitas were bred to hunt bears in packs of 8-12, how would hunters keep the dogs from killing each other first (if they were bred for pure aggression/strength)? I think it's well known that American Akitas are not usually well-paired beyond two unrelated Akitas of opposite sex. What would be the logistics of keeping a large group of Akitas in hunting trim without losing some during the hunt due to other Akitas? --MalcolmGin 18:00, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
 * I've never read that they hunted in packs that large; the breed profiles for american akitas (and other accounts I've read) state that they hunted Bear, boar & Deer with a mated pair, which seems to fit perfectly with my experience. My first pureblood loved the family cats and the family guinea pig; he was raised as a puppy around them, and completely accepted them; he would carry the cat around in his mouth, and I would often see the cat sleeping on him. If out of the yard he would ignore strange dogs until it was impossible to do so. The reason I originally commented is not to say that American Akitas are more "authentic", even though i think they are, but that the article needs to clearly state that it is not referring to American or Classical Akitas, but only the modern Japanese version.Paganize 10:26, 11 March 2007 (UTC)


 * Akitas are not dangerous dogs. However, they are a dog that needs to be properly socialised and that can be aggressive to other dogs, especially large dogs that threaten their dominance. But they are not dangerous to people - the story from the BBC link quoted above is highly unusual. The problem is that as the Akita has a "macho" image, the wrong sort of people get them. Then the dogs end up at Battersea Dogs Home as the owner can't handle them. I believe that the article should at least mention the potentially aggressive traits of the dog towards other dogs, so that people, especially those considering owning an Akita, have a balanced view. I speak from experiece - Akitas are fantastic dogs but they need a lot of work and a lot of watching. An Akita is not a dog you can take to the park and throw sticks for. When I have time I'll update the article. DerivMan (talk) 11:10, 9 August 2008 (UTC)

Very sad but... I don't know if anyone wants to mention it, but unfortunately this is another of the breeds being targeted by some countries legislation for breed bans, please see Breed Specific Legislation including (apparently) New York USA, Bermuda, Ireland ("Japanese Akita" specified) & Singapore. Although I disagree strongly with BSL, perhaps this is a way to show both sides of the story. Reference the good and the bad. I believe Akitas Japanese and American style are wonderful dogs, the only way to clear their name from this sort of stuff is by EDUCATION of the public. Keetanii (talk) 21:59, 31 March 2011 (UTC)

Can provide pictures of a pedigreed but undesireable (accdg to beed standard) Japanese line Aikita with long hair (moku)
My dog is a pedigreed Akita from Japanese lines, but is neutered and unable to breed/show because he's moku (long haired). He is brindle-patterned with a big white patch on his chest/belly. He has the standard build of a Japanese-line Akita.

If pictures of him would help with the requested images for this article, I can provide. if not, no hard feelings. --MalcolmGin 17:52, 9 March 2007 (UTC)


 * I'm sure everyone would really appreciate you doing that. If you upload them to wikicommons then they can be used in other wikiprojects too and perhaps an image gallery section can be added to this article if there are several good pics available.Gungadin 13:58, 10 March 2007 (UTC)


 * I'll gather pictures from my private archives and see if they fit the informative profile, clear it with my fiancee and then upload them to the commons. --MalcolmGin 23:45, 13 March 2007 (UTC)

I have three (short hair) two champion,champion bloodline Akita's and they stay seperate from one another but they are very friendly to both my Toy Poodle and a small mix breed that I keep in the house I have a male and a female that are Akc reg. and Show quality but I also have a male that has webbed feet and is not show quality but they are the best companion dogs I have ever had and after owning an Akita I will never I repeat never have a different large breed of ken I love spending time with them as if they were blood ken to me! I very much advise you to purchase one Akita in your lifetime and I bet you will feel the same way I do about this wonderful breed of ken or Ino... Mr.Springer from Walton Co.GA —Preceding unsigned comment added by 151.213.239.89 (talk) 18:57, 15 April 2008 (UTC)

Have added several cc-by-sa-2.5/GFDL licensed pictures of my moku, Japanese-lines akita inu to the commons
Photos are best accessed by my userpage gallery, one of which is here. Do as you will (of course) with the pictures. As we take more suitable pictures, I'll upload them, but the ones that are already uploaded show him with long, clipped, and half-grown-out fur. Not all of the shots are ideal from the point of view of breed or breed-standard illustration, but maybe they will be of some use. --MalcolmGin 02:20, 21 March 2007 (UTC)

Dangerous?
Akitas can be quite aggresive when provoked, I have a four-year old American/Japanese Akita and she still acts like a puupy alot of the time. She is not wholly socialized; she tends to growl at people if they come too close.... but I would highly disagree that Akitas are dangerous dogs. If you take the time to monitor their behavior, and discipline them for bad behavior, they can be amiable companions. There has only been one scenario where she nipped someone harder than play; my cousin was pulling her ears/tail and she was up in her face.

--MurtaghxMisery (talk) 19:29, 23 November 2007 (UTC)


 * I agree, but neglectful owners have led to the Akita's downfall. Mokoniki (talk) 22:16, 17 June 2009 (UTC)Mokoniki

Akita Inu is not a American Akita
Its completely different, please dont mix the two breeds. The weight of akita was wrong, and height too. See the FCI standard to understand what im saying. Akita Inu is a breed, American Akita is another, dont mix. Desfoque (talk) 04:32, 22 December 2007 (UTC)

Akita Ken ?
What exactly does Ken mean when added to their name. I learned that Akita means either Sword, Prefecture, or Concurrently so what does it mean here Akita-Sword, Akita-Prefecture? Arkkeeper (talk) 18:51, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

Oh now I see Ken is the Sino-Japanese Reading of Inu okay. I guess I didnt notice that before I think I personally like Inu better though. Arkkeeper (talk) 16:51, 2 February 2008 (UTC)

Kirby
"It has been suggested that Kirby (a character from the movie Balto III: Wings of Change) is an Akita Inu."

Where is this suggested (i.e. sources)? If there are none, this refference should be removed for lack of evidence and lack of importance.Wolface (talk) 05:14, 14 March 2008 (UTC)
 * I have removed this bit of trivia since it is pure speculation from the Balto fan community. --Coaster1983 (talk) 03:44, 1 April 2008 (UTC)

akita photo
I moved a image to the commons from FlickR that i feel would be a nice photo to add to the page.. it is here http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Molly_akita.jpg —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ltshears (talk • contribs) 17:17, 27 March 2008 (UTC)

GDV
I'd like to see the entry edited to emphasize how very quickly they can die. As a vet tech I have seen too many animals die because their owners opted to wait a few hours or overnight. The severity of this illness cannot be overstressed. The dilatation puts pressure on the abdominal vena cava and portal vein, causing shock and prevents blood flow to major organs! They can die in LESS than a few hours. http://www.thewagway.com/Behviour%20Tip%20Sheets/gastric_dilatation.htm —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.108.93.159 (talk) 16:23, 25 May 2008 (UTC)

Eagles? Citations?
After User:JordanFray Added a section where they were trained by eagles, there is no citation or notability to this. Requesting to delete this part. Ryou Hashimoto (talk) 01:22, 30 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Removed. Oda Mari (talk) 16:27, 2 October 2008 (UTC)

Thanks to Whoever included Gastric dilatation volvulus
My akita had this, I forgot what it was called and I wanted to warn people, thanks for including this. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.112.51.102 (talk) 05:34, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

Akita News
Interesting article! Nice work! I'd like to help with something I can get behind the paywall for, whereas others might not have a subscription. Sso I searched for Akita at Science News and found this. Do you think you could make use of it? You could state "Recent DNA research found that the Akita Inu has some wolf blood (at some point in the evolution of the breed it adquired some Chinese wolf DNA!" I found this in April 10th, 2010; Vol.177 #8, and I'll leave you the direct quote below.  The article was called "Who reined the dogs in" and was by "Saey, Tina H." and here's the paragraph it was in for a bit of context:

"Modern dog breeds, those that first appeared in the Victorian era, have more genetic kinship with Middle Eastern wolves than with other wolf populations, indicating that dogs probably stem from wolf forebears in that part of the world. Only Akitas, Chinese Shar Pei, chow chow and dingo — all ancient Asian breeds that persist today — hybridized with Chinese wolves. But the interbreeding between the Asian dog breeds and wolves probably happened after dogs were initially domesticated in the Middle East, says Beth Shapiro, an evolutionary biologist at Pennsylvania State University in University Park who was not associated with the new study."

Here's the URL for those who subscribe: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/57390/title/Who_reined_the_dogs_in

Thanks again and keep up the good work! Chrisrus (talk) 05:57, 31 July 2010 (UTC)

Page Clean up
There is far too much heresay in this article, and alot of the information is better described and referenced in the American Akita article such as the history section (since the two breeds share the same history up until WWII). There was also incorrect height information and weight information that suggested the Akita Inu was heavier than the American Akita. This is the problem with not citing references. Keetanii (talk) 23:34, 9 April 2011 (UTC)