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Categories: Horse News

Breed organizations support AQHA in clone registration lawsuit

It wasn’t too long ago that cloning was something out of science fiction. But in the decade since Prometea, the world’s first cloned horse, was born, the practice has moved from mad-scientist territory to a viable commercial enterprise. Some well-heeled owners will commit a sizable investment to create a genetic duplicate of a favorite horse. Among the well-known cloned horses are Olympic show jumpers Gem Twist and Sapphire, champion barrel racer Scamper and three-day eventing legend Tamarillo.



Gem Twist and Scamper were both gelded before the height of their careers, and their clones have been used to pass on those celebrated genes. The clones of Sapphire, a mare who is still very much alive and having a second career as a broodmare, may appear the jumper ring in the future. But cloning is still a controversial topic, and many breed registries have prohibited cloned horses from being registered, which also prevents them from competing in breed competitions.



The American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA) is the official registry of the most populous breed of horse in the world, and one of the organizations that has barred clones. In 2013, Quarter Horse breeder Jason Abraham and veterinarian Gregg Veneklasen sued the AQHA, stating that their prohibition of cloned horses constituted a monopoly. The jury ruled in favor of Abraham and Veneklasen, the plaintiffs, but awarded no damages in the case. The plaintiffs had sought up to $5 million.

The AQHA is appealing the court’s ruling, and has sought the support of other breed registries. Earlier this month, several organizations jointly filed an Amicus Brief, also known as a “friend-of-the-court brief,” which is information provided by someone not directly involved in the case but who may be affected by the result. The breed organizations included in the brief are the American Paint Horse Association, Appaloosa Horse Club, Arabian Horse Association, the Jockey Club (Thoroughbred registry), the Pinto Horse Association, the American Morgan Horse Association and the U.S. Trotting Association (Standardbred registry.) The American Horse Council and the American Kennel Club, which oversees purebred dog breeding in the U.S., joined the brief as well.

Not all of these groups share the AQHA’s ban on clones. According to a news release from the American Morgan Horse Association, the organization has no stance on cloning but supports the brief on the basis of these two statements from it:

1) The Amici Curiae do not believe the AQHA can violate the Sherman Anti-Trust Act as found by the trial court, because a single entity is incapable of conspiring with itself for the purposes of the Sherman Act. As the brief describes, the officers or committees of a single organization are not separate economic actors pursuing separate interests, so agreements among them do not suddenly bring together economic power that was previously pursuing divergent goals. Accordingly, the single entity rule excludes from the Sherman Act unilateral conduct by an organization. Further, actions taken by a single organization or entity are presumed to be independent action rather than concerted action and, thus, are not prohibited under the Sherman Act.

2) The Amici Curiae do not believe a court should mandate that any private organization must adopt certain specific rules, as the trial court did by ordering that AQHA adopt eleven specifically worded rules. Private organizations have a right to govern themselves through the adoption, administration and interpretation of their own rules. Judicial intervention by rewriting those rules improperly interferes with the internal affairs of the organization

The second point will resonate with many horse owners, regardless of their stance on cloning. While the AQHA has decided not to allow clones or their offspring to be registered, that does not prevent owners of Quarter Horses from cloning them if they wish to do so. Scamper, the cloned barrel racer, was a Quarter Horse. His clones and their offspring are not registered, but because most barrel competitions do not have a breed requirement, they are still potentially valuable equine athletes.

The AQHA does not prevent cloning of Quarter Horses from occurring, but it believes that it has the right to make rules based on the will of its membership. According to an AQHA survey, 86% of its members believe that clones should not be registered.

The American Paint Horse Association’s Executive Director Billy Smith explained succinctly why his organization supported the brief.

“APHA filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of AQHA because we felt that the judge’s ruling put all breed associations at risk and in a position where we couldn’t make and enforce our own rules,” Smith said.

The AQHA states the following arguments in regards to registering clones.

Since its inception in 1940, American Quarter Horse breeders have been in the honorable business of working to make each generation of horses better than the generation before. There is a fundamental, shared belief among AQHA members that the art and science of breeding is the way to improve the breed. Cloning doesn’t improve the breed; it just makes Xerox copies of the same horses. With clones we’re not moving forward, we’re staying the same.”

Read more on the AQHA’s position on cloning at AQHA.com.


View Comments

  • I don't think you should be able to register a cloned horse, in fact I don't think you should be able to clone a horse! People are trying to play God and that will always end badly! It is unnatural and quite selfish on humans part.

  • This isn't right. The horse cloned will have bad health and die at an early age. Cloning is not something we should do.

  • I think they should allow cloned horses in the registry. They are just as much pure breds as the original.

  • I don't agree with cloning and it was wrong to get the courts involoved in trying to change the rules with the AQHA the horses were not bred the were cloned if they want to register the clones should have on organization to do so the association should decide what to allow to be registered as it has been since its development

  • its a hard subject. like a farm could have dozens of clones of their best racehorse and that almost isn't fair. But clones are still a horse. i won't refer to them as clones because they're as alive and real as the other horse.

  • Cloning is here to stay if you like it or not. I do not think it is wrong. It is technology. Registries will need to handle the situation as their members see fit. Bottom line...its all about the MONEY.
    Cloned double-muscle cattle for more choice cuts of beef, GMO plants/foods/etc, bigger/better corn...you name it. Higher yields = more money. Big name horses = more money. Sad but true. Would you turn down a cloned HEART from your own DNA if you were dying of heart disease? Would you clone up EYES if you were going blind? The scope of this technology is mind-boggling.

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