DIET & NUTRITION

The mission behind the Natural Pet Expo exists is to promote natural and holistic health. One myth that needs debunking is that commercially manufactured and processed pet food conveniently contain everything that a pet needs for a long, healthy life - just like the packaging and advertisements say. Right?

Wrong.

If you're reading this than you probably already know not to buy into the advertisements and packaging.  What you may not  understand is that commercially prepared foods are highly processed and artificial, composed of poor quality ingredients. Pet food companies highly process their food which strips nutrients out of the end product.  They often choose substandard protein sources like meat by-products and also add grains to their formulas because they are inexpensive. However, the grains used in pet foods are often waste products from the human food industry. Other unwanted items to look out for are soymeal, artificial colorings and flavorings, animals fats and harmful preservatives like BHA and ethoxyquin.  Learn to read labels!

Despite social pressures for manufacturers to hop on the holistic packaging bandwagon, meat content is often composed of questionable by-products.  When you see the word meat by-products on a label, it can mean anything from cancerous tissues to diseased organs to ingredients unfit for human consumption, like beaks, feathers and feet. Why? It's cheaper, and cheap ingredients make a cheap diet some pets eat day in, day out. And many consumers still buy into the affordability, reassured by pretty packaging, brands, and marketing claiming that they are getting a complete & balanced diet.

Consumers might not be paying, but their pets are. Research and studies link poor diets to allergies and illness. Pets these days are not living as long as they used to and have an alarmingly high rate of cancer and other degenerative diseases, like arthritis, kidney and liver disease. Fresh food, especially lean meat and veggies, can provide the nutrition pets can't get from commercially manufactured, processed foods. Many now see that fresh homemade diets are worth the effort if you make the time and follow guidelines carefully. A healthy, happy pet is its own reward.

Choosing to feed a natural, fresh diet requires some basic knowledge. Cats are “obligate carnivores,” meaning they must have meat to survive. According to leading authorities, cats need 70 to 95 percent meat (protein + fat) in their diet cannot survive as vegetarians and do not need grains. Studies show dogs, like their wolf relatives, tend to be scavengers, which means that they require lesser amounts of proteins and eat a wider variety of foods. Many experts suggest that it is possible, but not easy and not recommended, to feed a dog a balanced vegetarian diet. Cats also do not have a strong thirst drive. In the wild, they would get 65-75% of their water from their prey. Yet today, we feed our cats dry kibble that contain more grains than meat and only averages 10 percent water. Holistic vets and nutrition experts maintain the general rule is that  cats should never be fed kibble, even a super premium brand. One vet has even called kibble “diabetes in a bag” for cats because of the high carbohydrate content.

You're convinced that you want to go natural when it comes to feeding your pet. Now what? I've been there, done that and have left confused or even frustrated. There are so many options to choose from, so much to learn, so many questions to ask and decisions to make--which food is right for your pets needs? Is it the raw BARF diet? Raw meaty bones? Leafing through homemade recipes? Joining co-ops to buy farm raised, organic meat and produce? Handmade, prepared and catered? Prepackaged, frozen, dehydrated or super-premium kibbles and canned? Then you have to factor in your pet's breed, size, age, environment, activity and individual traits while making decisions.

Fear not...I got through it and so can you. There are medical professionals, animal nutritionists, articles, books, DVDs, books on tape, interviews and opinions on the subject to help you determine what is best for your pet.  My pain is your gain; below I've listed favorite links, books, brands and articles compiled during my search. Note: If you are considering feeding raw or home-made, do not wing it.  Do your research and PLEASE follow recipes precisely to make sure you are giving your animal the balanced nutrition it needs for optimal health.  

Recommended reading: Dr Pitcairns New Guide to Natural Health, Natural Nutrition for Dogs & Cats: The Ultimate DietThe Holistic Guide for a Healthy Dog, Natural Cat Care, Natural Dog Care, Give a Dog a Bone, Your Cat: Simple New Secrets, Reining Cats & Dogs, Raw Dog FoodAnd if you don't want to visit your local library or book store, visit Pets Need Wholesome Food Also -- a free online resource for feeding raw natural diets. 

A comprehensive source to check to see if YOUR food choice rates is the Dog Food Safe List.

Remember, it's ALL worth it when you experience your animal friend's glossy coat, bright eyes, clean smell, fresh breath and happy, healthy, energetic countenance.

Tallyho!

For more detailed information, please visit the useful resource links and references below. *Buy Local/Delaware Valley - PA, DE, NJ  are highlighted. To submit a link for consideration please click here.

Disclaimer: Please consult a veterinarian before making any diet or nutrition changes for your pet.
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ARTICLES: Food & Nutrition (Scroll down for each article)

  • Common Foods That Are Harmful to Dogs

  • Book Synopsis: The Natural Dog - By Deva Khalsa, VMD

  • Are You Killing Your Pet With Commercial Kibble

  • Protect Your Pet From the Pet Food Industry

  • Fresh Food Diets: The Best Choice for Optimum Health for Dogs & Cats!

  • Take Charge of Your Animals Health: Make Your Own Pet Food

  • Get the Facts: What's Really in Pet Food?

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Common Foods That Are Harmful Or Even Fatal to Dogs

Many common foods are actually harmful or even fatal to dogs. Some of these (listed below) will surprise you. Others are things you would never give your dog purposefully, but now you will be more careful to not let them be in your dog's reach. And some just need to be limited to small amounts.

avacados are toxic to dogs Avocados (fruit, pit, and plant) are toxic to dogs. Avocados contain a toxic component called persin, which can damage heart, lung and other tissue in many animals. They are high in fat and can trigger stomach upset, vomiting and even pancreatitis. Symptoms of toxicity include difficulty breathing, abdominal enlargement, abnormal fluid accumulations in the chest, abdomen and sac around the heart. The amount that needs to be ingested to cause signs is unknown. The effects on dogs and cats are not completely understood. GI signs are commonly seen and should be treated symptomatically. In addition, the animal should be monitored closely for other clinical signs related to the cardiovascular system. (This information comes from veterinarians, the American Veterinary Medicine Association, and the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center.)

onions can be fatal to dogs Onions destroy red blood cells and can cause anemia, weakness, and breathing difficulty. Even small amounts can cause cumulative damage over time. This includes onions or chives - raw, powdered, dehydrated, or cooked.

garlic is harmful to dogs Large amounts of garlic cause the same problems as onions. Garlic contains only a small amount of the problematic substance that is in onions. Just as with people, moderation is the key.

grapes and raisins can be fatal to dogs Grapes and raisins can cause kidney failure in dogs. As little as a single serving of raisins can kill him. If the dog doesn't eat enough at one time to be fatal, he can be severely damaged by eating just a few grapes or raisins regularly.

tomatoes can be fatal to dogs Tomatoes (plant and fruit) contain tomatine, an alkaloid related to solanine. As the fruit ripens, the tomatine is metabolized. Therefore, ripe tomatoes are less likely to be problematic for animals. Clinical signs of poisoning include lethargy, drooling, difficulty breathing, colic, vomiting, diarrhea or constipation, widely-dilated pupils, paralysis, cardiac effects, central nervous system signs (e.g., ataxia, muscle weakness, tremors, seizures), resulting from cholinesterase inhibition, coma and death. (This information comes from veterinarians, and the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center.) (All parts of the plant except the tomato itself are poisonous to humans, although some people are sensitive to the ripe fruit also.)

Tomatoes also contain atropine, which can cause dilated pupils, tremors, and heart arrhythmias. The highest concentration of atropine is found in the leaves and stems of tomato plants, with less in unripe (green) tomatoes, and even less in ripe (red) tomatoes.

nutmeg is can be fatal to dogs Nutmeg can cause tremors, seizures and death.

caffeine is harmful to dogs Caffeine (from coffee, coffee grounds, tea, or tea bags) stimulates the central nervous and cardiac systems, and can cause vomiting, restlessness, heart palpitations, and even death within hours.

xylitol sweetener can harm dogs Diet products containing the sweetener Xylitol can cause a sudden drop in blood sugar, resulting in depression, loss of coordination and seizures. Unless treatment is given quickly, the dog could die.

macadamia nuts can harm dogs Macadamia nuts can cause weakness, muscle tremor and paralysis. These symptoms are usually temporary.

walnuts are poisonous to dogs Walnuts. When dogs eat the seed hulls, they can get an upset stomach and diarrhea. The real problem is the fungus or mold that attacks walnuts after they get wet (from rain or sprinklers), which produces toxins. If the fungus or mold is ingested by your dogs, they can become very ill and possibly die. Signs that should alert you to walnut poisoning are vomiting, trembling, drooling, lack of coordination, lethargy, loss of appetite, and jaundice indications such as yellowing eyes and gums. Severely affected dogs can produce blood-tinged vomit or stools. Dogs can take several days to exhibit serious signs of illness.

chocolate can be fatal to dogs Chocolate can cause seizures, coma and death. Baker’s chocolate is the most dangerous. The darker the chocolate, the more dangerous it is. But any chocolate, in large enough amounts, can kill a dog. An ounce of chocolate can poison a 30-pound dog, and many dogs will happily consume more than this. The symptoms may not show up for several hours (and so might make you think all is well), with death following within twenty-four hours. A dog can consume milk chocolate and appear to be fine because it is not as concentrated, but it is still dangerous.

fruit pits are toxic to dogs Apple seeds, cherry pits, peach pits, pear pips, plums pits, and apricot pits contain cyanide, which is poisonous. While a few apple seeds may not cause a problem, the effects can accumulate over time if they are given to dogs regularly. Dogs should not be allowed to chew on a peach pit, cherry pit, apricot pit, or plum pit. Chewing can allow ingestion of cyanide. Chewing could also result in the pit being swallowed, causing continuous exposure to cyanide, or could cause the dog to choke.

too much salt is harmful to dogs Too much salt can cause kidney problems. Also, large breeds of dogs that eat salty food may then drink too much water and develop bloat, which is fatal unless emergency treatment is given very quickly.

too much fat is harmful to dogs Too much fat or fried foods can cause pancreatitis.

ham and bacon are bad for dogs Ham and bacon contain too much fat and too much salt, and can cause pancreatitis. Also, large breeds of dogs that eat salty food may drink too much water and develop a life-threatening condition called bloat. This is where the stomach fills up with gas and within several hours may twist, causing death.

too much liver is harmful to dogs Raw liver or too much cooked liver (three servings a week) can lead to vitamin A toxicity. This can cause deformed bones, excessive bone growth on the elbows and spine, weight loss, and anorexia. Check the label of your canned dog food to be sure that it does not contain liver if you are giving your dog liver also.

wild mushrooms can be fatal to dogs Wild mushrooms can cause abdominal pain, drooling, liver damage, kidney damage, vomiting, diarrhea, convulsions, coma, or death.

raw egg whites alone are bad for dogs Raw egg whites contain a protein called avidin, which can deplete your dog of biotin, one of the B vitamins. Biotin is essential to your dog’s growth and coat health. The lack of it can cause hair loss, weakness, growth retardation, or skeleton deformity. Raw egg yolks contain enough biotin to prevent the deficiency, so this is not a problem with raw whole eggs. Raw egg yolks could contain salmonella, so you should get your eggs from a reliable source or cook the eggs.

large amounts of grains are bad for dogs Grains should not be given in large amounts or make up a large part of a dog’s diet, but rice is generally safe in small amounts.

cooked bones can kill dogs Cooked bones can splinter and tear a dog’s internal organs.

dogs need their vegetables cut up Dogs can't digest most vegetables (carrots, green beans, lettuce, potatoes or yams) whole or in large pieces. Potato peels and green potatoes are dangerous.

dairy products can be harmful to dogs Dairy products are high in fat, which can cause pancreatitis, gas and diarrhea. A small amount of non-fat, plain yogurt is usually safe.

pennies can be fatal to dogs Pennies made from the 1980s to today contain zinc, which can cause kidney failure and damage to red blood cells. A dog that consumes even one penny can become quite sick, or even die, if the penny is not removed.

Note: According to the ASPCA, "Some dogs can eat [avocadoes] without having any adverse reactions. .... The Guatemalan variety, a common one found in stores, appears to be the most problematic. Other strains of avocado can have different degrees of toxic potential."

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The Natural Dog by Deva Khalsa V.M.D.  

In her latest book Natural Dog, Dr. Deva Khalsa comes to the aid of pet owners sharing her effective, integrative approach to natural health and healing for dogs and cats.  With the foreword by Dr. Marty Goldstein, the contents of Natural Dog were developed over decades of practice and study.

Her method combines many deeply effective modalities such as Allergy Elimination Technique, Homeopathy and Chinese Herbs, along with others.

Dr. Khalsa’s Natural Dog is a holistic guide for healthier dogs which includes information on:

·   The facts about commercial dog food

·   Proper nutrition and how to feed your dog for optimal health

·   Supplements with herbs, vitamins, and minerals

·   Holistic strategies for preventing, managing, and treating health issues, including allergies, cancer, and diabetes

·   Remedies for special-needs dogs

·   Plus 50 healthy and tasty recipes. 

Here are some excerpts from Natural Dog that you may find both helpful and fun.

HISTORY OF DOG FOOD 

“Up until the nineteenth century, our dogs ate what we ate. The more affluent its owner, the better off the dog fared. The diet of a typical working-class dog that lived a couple centuries ago may have consisted of bread, potatoes and boiled cabbage, while the elite and privileged would lavish their dogs with roast duck and consommé.  “Table scraps” had not yet become a bad word.”

COOKING UP CANINE HEALTH 

It’s possible to rustle up good meals for your dog no matter how much or how little free time you have.  First, you need to evaluate your own personal “hassle factor”, the limits of your capability when it comes to canine cooking.  If you don’t consider this honestly, you risk turning what should be a loving effort into a major imposition on your time when you barely have enough time to do everything else on your agenda.  To avoid feeling that those trips to the grocer or butcher on behalf of your canine companions are burdensome, take the questionnaire in Natural Dog to guide you in determining just how far you can comfortably go in changing your dog’s diet.

THE CURE IS IN THE CUPBOARD
Learning about the herbs that are used in botanical medicine reveals a bright new world.  We are surrounded by plants that have the ability to increase both our own and our pets' health.

It may surprise you to learn that some of the plants you may typically purchase for your perennial garden are medical plants.

The Coneflower, for example, is a common plant in perennial gardens.  It is also called Purple Coneflower, or Echinacea.  This plant gives a powerful boost to the immune system and is commonly taken when a cold or flu is coming on.  Another example of a common healing plant is Hypericum, or St. John's

Wart; a pale green plant that produces delicate yellow flowers.  This plant can help with depression and it also has antiviral properties.

ELIMINATING ALLERGIES 

In the case of allergies, the immune system begins to register certain ‘good guys’ as enemies. Common and innocuous substances become identified by the immune system as threats to the body.  Consider the child who is allergic to peanuts.  One small bit of peanut in food or even just breathing in peanut dust is all it takes to initiate a severe allergic reaction- one so over-exaggerated that it actually becomes life threatening.  Why do peanuts cause this particular child to suffer?  Because his internal computer system has been corrupted to behave in a self-destructive manner.

CANCER PREVENTION AND TREATMENT

Don’t use bone meal as a calcium source.  First of all, the calcium in bone meal cannot be absorbed.  And some bone meal contains toxic heavy metals such as lead and cadmium, which are absorbed.  Cadmium appears to be the single largest contributor to        autoimmune thyroid disease.  This powerful toxic metal depletes the selenium in the body.  Selenium is very important in protecting cells from cancer.

DOGS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS  MELATONIN TO THE RESCUE!  Based on a study of published cased from Nicholas Dodman and Linda Arononson at Tufts Veterinary School, melatonin has been found to help with separation anxiety, destructive chewing, and the fear of thunderstorms and loud noises.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dr. Deva Khalsa is a licensed doctor of veterinary medicine. A member of the American Veterinary Medical Association, the American Holistic Veterinary Medical Association, and the International Veterinary Acupuncture Society, she has studied homeopathy for more then twenty-five years, as well as other alternative therapies.

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Are You Killing Your Pet With Commercial Kibble?

By Russell Louie, Optimum Choices, LLC

The common ingredient in pet food recalls, whether canned or dry kibble, is grains: wheat gluten, rice protein or corn. We used to feed our cats dry kibble because the manufacturers say it’s “complete and balanced”. After our first two cats died of kidney disease or Chronic Renal Failure (CRF) at age 17, we learned that grains are not appropriate for carnivores (meat-eating animals needing 65-95% meat). Dry kibble must contain grains or other carbohydrates to hold it together during processing. At most, it contains 50% meat and most brands are less than 30%. Upon learning that, we transitioned our remaining cat, Connie, to a grain-free canned and raw food diet. When we acquired our dog, Mikki, we immediately put her on a canned food diet and then transitioned her to raw food. Even the training treats we give Mikki are grain-free (we buy dried meat treats sold at natural pet stores instead of dog “cookies”).

One reason to avoid grains is the quality in most commercial pet foods is different than what you would cook for your pet. Typically, the good quality grains go into human foods and what is left over (unfit for human consumption) gets used in pet food. The grains in pet food are more likely to contain toxic molds, pesticides and man-made contaminants (such as melamine). Also, the plant protein in grains and soy in pet food gets counted towards the total protein of the food, though our pets, as carnivores, can’t utilize it. They are designed to get their protein from meat, not plants. The holistic veterinarian and pet food expert Dr. Jean Hofve (www.LittleBigCat.com) recommends avoiding all non-meat protein sources. She states that cheap vegetable protein substitutes are inappropriate in the diet of a carnivore and are used by the pet food companies only to increase profit.

It is especially important to avoid grains with cats because they are “obligate carnivores,” meaning they must have meat to survive. Their bodies are not designed to digest carbohydrates. Cats need 70-95% meat (protein + fat) in their diet and cannot survive as vegetarians. Domestic cats are descended from the African wild cat, whose natural diet was limited to rodents, birds, eggs, reptiles and insects. Notice that there are no grains or carbs in that list. They got their moisture from their food and not from drinking water, as they lived in the desert. Their prey contains 65-75 percent water. Cats do not have a strong thirst drive compared to other mammals so they will not drink water until they are already dehydrated. This wild cat was domesticated by the Egyptians 4,000 years ago to protect their granaries from rodents. The cat was ideally suited to this task, since it did not eat grains.

Yet today, most of us feed our cats dry kibble that contain more grains than meat and only averages 10 percent water. Could this be why so many cats get kidney disease or Chronic Renal Failure (CRF)? The new grain-free kibbles are not a solution either since they lack water and the higher protein in them makes them even more dehydrating. They still have a fattening starch in them such as potato or tapioca starch to hold them together. The epidemic of obesity in our dogs and cats, which can cause many health problems, is yet another reason not to feed our pets grains or other starches (which are fattening to carnivores). Other health problems caused by feeding dry kibble include urinary tract disorders and diabetes. One vet called dry kibble for cats “diabetes in a bag” and holistic vets state that it can often be cured by taking the cat off of dry food.

According to holistic vets, home-cooked or raw food is ideal and canned food is better for your dog or cat than dry kibble. Since there has been some “cross contamination” of pet foods made on the same equipment as the recalled food, home-prepared food is obviously the safest diet. However, it is important to balance the diet properly. If you just feed your dog or cat what you would feed your child (meat, vegetables, grains), they will not get all the nutrients they need. As carnivores, our dogs and cats need more calcium than us, to balance out the muscle and organ meats. Their wild ancestors ate the entire prey animal, including the bones. So just cooking up chicken and rice for your dog is not going to be adequate. In addition to ground bones or bone meal, we suggest supplementing with superfoods rich in minerals, amino acids and enzymes such as BioPreparation algae, to help ensure your pet receives all the nutrients their body requires. Steve Brown, raw food expert and founder of Steve’s Real Food (a balanced commercial raw food), analyzed several popular home-made raw food diets and found them to be deficient in trace minerals and calcium (article published in the January-March 2007 Journal of the American Holistic Veterinary Medical Association).

Our cat Connie is now somewhere between 20-23 years old. We attribute her longevity to her improved diet and the addition of BioPreparation algae, as well as minimal vaccines. The fact that she is so healthy at her advanced age shows the power of diet to promote health.

Optimum Choices has over 75+ years of holistic experience. They do not offer supplements that just treat symptoms but whole food products that promote total wellness. To learn more about the optimum diet for dogs and cats read their e-Book: Optimum nutrition for dogs and cats available at: www.OptimumChoices.com or contact them at info@OptimumChoices.com or (866) 305-2306.

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Protect Your Pet from the Pet Food Industry    By Jennifer Forsyth

The big question nowadays is: “What happened to the pet food industry?” And secondly, “What can be done to help prevent this from happening to my pet?”   

It all began in mid-March when Menu foods issued a recall of canned foods containing wheat gluten from a new supplier in China.  Several days later it was discovered that the wheat gluten was contaminated (adulterated may be the better word here) with melamine.  Then dry food and treats made with this wheat gluten were recalled.  Then rice protein and corn gluten were added to the list of plant-based proteins contaminated with melamine.  How could this be?  Melamine is a chemical used in the production of plastics.  It is now believed that melamine was deliberately added by companies in China producing plant-based proteins.  The addition of this “ingredient” helps to falsely elevate the protein content in the food. 

So what exactly is a plant-based protein doing in a carnivore’s cuisine?  Many times these ingredients (wheat gluten, corn gluten, rice protein) are used because they are cheaper that meat.  In fairness to rice protein, there are times when this ingredient (more expensive than the glutens) may be needed to limit the meat to one type, as typically needed by dogs and cats with allergies.  Rice protein, in foods where lamb and venison are the meat bases, is used to achieve the desired protein levels while limiting the amount of ash and decreasing the risk of rancidity.   

To help protect your pet there are several things you can do.  The most important thing is to read the labels of your pet’s food (I will be giving a talk at the Natural Pet Expo on how to do this).  If there are grains in the food, select whole grains.  For example: whole wheat is fine, but wheat gluten is not.  I would advise avoiding corn, wheat, and soy altogether as these are usually cheaper ingredients.  Brown rice, barley, oatmeal, millet, amaranth, quinoa are better choices.  Make sure that meat is the first ingredient and make sure the type of meat is identified.  For example: chicken meat/meal is fine, but poultry meal/byproducts is not.   

Other tidbits to help protect your pet:  store the food in the original bag – just in case you ever need the date of manufacture and food code (hopefully you won’t even need this, but it’s best to be safe).  Listen to your pet – if they develop anorexia, diarrhea, vomiting, have increased lethargy, drinking, or urination stop feeding that food and see your veterinarian right away so that the problem can be documented in their chart. 

Jennifer Forsyth, VMD

Bethel Mill Animal Hospital

(856) 589-7388

www.bethelmillanimalhospital.com


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Fresh Food Diets:

The Best Choice for Optimum Health for Dogs and Cats!   

The health benefits of eating a fresh food diet are profound, for people, dogs and cats. Learn more about raw and home-cooked diets for your pets!

All of our animal companions -- reptile, avian, rodent, equine, canine, or feline -- benefit from eating diets natural to their species, whether raw or home cooked. Our pet food company received hundreds of letters each year, from veterinarians using fresh food diets, breeders reporting multi-generational improvement, and from very happy customers whose experience confirmed our own – they saw thinner, fitter animals with cleaner teeth, less aches and pains, reduction or elimination of “allergy” symptoms, reduced flea problems, and happier dispositions after switching to fresh food.

We know of dozens of animals, close to death when we met them, living far past predicted survival times with excellent quality of life--on fresh food diets.

Dogs and Cats Thrive On Raw Meat Based Diets

It's simple! Balanced fresh food (meat, bone, and vegetables) diets are more nutritious than the modern (dry food) diet, because raw, fresh foods provide much more complete and balanced nutrition than that found in highly processed foods.

The natural diet of dogs and cats contains a variety of raw, real foods teeming with bacteria. These foods are high in protein and low in carbohydrate. Below are approximate levels for dogs; natural cat diets are higher in protein and lower in carbohydrate. (1)

    Natural Diet of Dogs

    55% protein (Dry Matter)

    14% carbohydrate (DM)

    Dry Dog Food

    25% +/- protein (DM)

    40 - 70% carbohydrate (DM)

There is a radical difference between the natural diet of dogs and cats and the dry food we feed most of them!

In the natural diet, micronutrients include the natural, organic forms of vitamins and minerals, and thousands of different antioxidants. In dry food diets, many of the micronutrients are human-synthesized vitamins and minerals. Formulas contain only the 23 components deemed “essential.”

This is far fewer than are considered essential in human foods.

There is a world of difference between synthesized vitamins and minerals and those found in highly processed, cooked commercial foods. Hundreds of studies show that people and laboratory animals that eat fresh vegetables and fruits are healthier and have a lower incidence of cancer, stroke and heart disease than those whose intake of micronutrients is primarily from human-made forms. There is no reason to think that our animals are different, yet most of them get almost all their vitamins and minerals in synthetic, human-made, forms.

Dogs and cats diagnosed with “unsolvable” problems (arthritis, diabetes, a wide range of gastrointestinal problems, allergies) often recover completely when eating a properly prepared fresh food diet. There are conditions for which a cooked diet might be better, and animals with health problems should be closely supervised by a veterinarian with extensive fresh food experience.

Whether we can totally solve health problems or not, by providing stressed bodies with the tools for healing, we can optimize the outcome. Dogs and cats are designed to eat food in its natural state

Canine and feline digestive systems have not changed from the time when they were feral carnivores. There is little debate about this. Dr. Buddington of Mississippi State University, a noted expert on the physiology of mammals, summarizes: “Comparative studies have revealed a close relationship between intestinal characteristics, the evolutionary diet, and requirements of energy and nutrients”. (2)

Dogs and cats live in a bacterial world. Your dog goes out for a short walk in your garden. She absorbs just a few grams of soil, and then comes in and licks her pads. In those two grams of soil, there were probably billions of bacteria of hundreds of different species, some friendly and some not. Consumption of bacteria is natural for dogs and cats.

Safety of Commercial Raw Diets

Commercial raw diets have been on the market for more than 20 years. We know many retailers who sell raw diets. We’ve talked to hundreds of veterinarians who recommend raw diets, and have met thousands of consumers. Combined, the raw diet manufacturers have fed more than 100,000 dogs without a single documented death due to bacterial problems.

Some people worry about bacteria, and a small percentage of animals have trouble with some foods. Raw meat based pet food companies and veterinarians who use fresh food diets in their practices investigate reports they hear of problems with food. They are often able to sort out what the difficulty was, and food has rarely been the problem.

Safety of Commercial Dry Food Diets

The safety record of the dry pet food industry is not as good as that of the raw diet industry. We can all recall episodes of dozens of dogs dying from eating bad or moldy dry dog foods. In 2003, for example, 48 dogs were reported to have died soon after consuming a so-called “natural” dry dog food. These deaths are just the tip of the iceberg. Read our book, See Spot Live Longer, to learn about mycotoxins, toxic waste products from molds which are unavoidable in dry dog foods that use low-cost grains. poor home storage contributes to these problems.

Only a few of the animals that consume mycotoxin-contaminated foods will die quickly. Chronic, low level ingestion of these toxins causes cancer 3 to 5 years later. Consumption of mycotoxin-contaminated dry pet foods may be a major contributing factor to the cancer epidemic in pets.

Choosing Commercial Fresh Food Diets

To feed your animals the absolute best diet, grow your own livestock and produce on your organic family farm. If you can do this, or patronize a family farm coop, you’ll be doing the best you possibly can.

Commercial products make it easy to feed a fresh food diet. Dozens of raw food brands are now available at many pet food and natural food stores. Some are available by mail. If you do some research, it is easy to tell the difference between excellent commercial raw diets and poor ones. We recommend using products with all human-edible ingredients. We are primarily concerned about the level of toxins in low quality ingredients. The FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine issued model guidelines for raw pet diet manufacturers in 2002. The guidelines recommended the use of human-edible ingredients. However, manufacturers are not yet required to follow this recommendation.

The best manufacturers combine knowledge of modern canine nutritional science with an understanding of the ancestral diet of dogs and cats to produce a “complete and balanced” raw diet. The labels on these packages have a statement that the food meets the AAFCO (American Association of Feed Control Officials, the people who regulate pet foods) nutrient profiles.

“Component” raw products supply “meat and bone” or “meat, bone and vegetable” mixes, with instructions to buyers to add the missing ingredients. These products can be excellent, as long as you follow their supplementation recommendations.

Conscientious manufacturers test their foods periodically. They provide complete nutrient profiles and technical support to you and your veterinarian.

Making Your Own

If you want to make a fresh food diet for your animals, go slowly, do it right, and learn first. Improperly prepared diets can be a health hazard. There are many books about raw and fresh diets, and some are excellent. You’ll learn that there is no one definitive “right” answer. Some books are rather casual about nutrition, some are difficult to understand. We urge you to read several books before deciding what the best choice is for your animals, always comparing recommendations to the natural diet of the species. The support of a veterinarian skilled in fresh food diets can be of great assistance.

Is Fresh Food Best? We Think So!

We have no question about this at all. The health benefits of a fresh food diet for your four legged friends are similar to those for humans, and just as important. Even a small amount of fresh food can have a big impact. In almost all animals the switch to a fresh diet, in the balance natural to the species, improves health, and can prolong life and vitality.

There’s no substitute for fresh food! You animals will thank you.

P.S. Cat people: Your cats might not thank you immediately!

(1) Calculated using data from Landry and Van Kruiningen, “Food Habits of Feral Carnivores: a Review of Stomach Content Analysis” Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association, Nov 1979.

(2) Buddington, Randal. “Structure and Functions of the Dog and Cat Intestine,” proceedings of the 1996 Iams International Nutrition Symposium. 61- 71.

We are not veterinarians. The content of this article is for information only. We strongly suggest that you find a veterinarian who is well-informed about whole food diets to help you with your animals.

© Steve Brown and Beth Taylor 2007

Authors of ‘See Spot Live Longer’ Visit their website: www.seespotlivelonger.com

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Take Charge of Your Animal’s Health: Make Your Own Pet Food

Last year dogs died or became ill because of a large batch of contaminated grain-based dry food. Right now, recalled pet food from one of the largest manufacturers of food in North America is responsible for killing many family pets. What’s safe to feed? To provide the best food of all, take control of the ingredients and make it yourself.

Here are recipes for two size batches of food. It’s quite simple to put together a “complete and balanced” diet – and it will be tastier and more nutritious than anything you can buy. We’ll discuss the components of the diet and the supplements you need after we give you the basic recipes, and give you guidelines about how much to feed.

The natural diet of dogs consisted of about 85% meat and bone from small prey animals and some larger ones, and various scavenged foods, some fruits and grasses. It was high in water and protein, contained a moderate amount of fat from relatively lean prey animals with excellent omega 3 content, and whole vegetation with lots of vitamins and antioxidants.    The prey animals of cats are smaller and have less bone, and the veggies are a smaller proportion of their diet.

Our recipes replicate that balance. They’ve been compared to our analyses of the prey diet, to the AAFCO (pet food standard) guidelines, and the 2006 National Research Council recommendations: http://dels.nas.edu/dels/rpt_briefs/dog_nutrition_final.pdf.  There is no grain in our recipes. Grain is not a natural part of the diet of dogs or cats and causes ill health in many ways. The potential for harm from toxins in grain-based food is completely avoided by eliminating grain from the ingredient list.

Boneless food for dogs, small batch

Enough for a medium sized dog for one day, or several days for a small dog

            Boneless chicken or beef, 90% lean     12 ounces (1 1/2 cups)

            Liver and heart            2 ounces (1/4 cup) (1 ounce each)

            Veggie and fruit mix    3-4 ounces (about 1/2 cup)

            Bone Meal or MCHA  1 level tablespoon

            Rice bran         1 tablespoon (9 grams)

            Sea Salt            1/8 teaspoon

Boneless food for dogs, large batch:

Enough for about a week for a 50 pound dog

            Boneless chicken or beef, 90% lean     9 pounds (18 cups)

            Liver and heart            1/2 pound each (1 cup each)

            Veggie and fruit mix    2 pounds (4 cups)

            Bone Meal or MCHA  3.5 ounces (a little less than 1/2 cup)

            Rice bran         2 oz  ( heaping 1/2 cup)

            Sea Salt            2 teaspoons (6 grams)

Boneless food for cats, small batch

Enough for several days: cats like variety, so make at least two kinds and rotate!  Please note: You must use the heart for taurine and feed fish (preferably canned salmon) at least once per week.

            Boneless chicken or beef, 90% lean     14 ounces (1 1/2 cups)

            Liver and heart            (1/4 cup) (1 ounce each)

            Veggie and fruit mix    1-2 ounces (about 1/4 cup)

            Bone Meal or MCHA  2 teaspoons

            Rice bran         1 tablespoon

            Sea Salt            1/8 teaspoon

Meat Mix

The larger recipe will provide food for about 7-10 days for a 50# dog, assuming that the dog eats about 1.25# a day. If you have smaller dogs, it might last 10. However, it wouldn’t last that long in the refrigerator. Freeze food that will not be used in a couple of days.

You can use beef, chicken, pork, turkey, or fish for the meat. These recipes are for lean meats only.

Organ meats provide minerals and other nutrients that are essential: they must be included. Many humans don’t like to deal with organ meats. It may be more pleasant to deal with a larger amount of food than with a daily preparation event. You might be able to have your butcher grind organs and meat together for you. Organ meats are a requirement for both cats and dogs,

You can cook the meat, or serve it raw. In our experience, raw meat-based foods are far safer than commercial grain-based foods. However, if it’s your opinion that raw meat-based foods are unsafe, cook the meat. It’s still better and fresher than anything you can buy.

Fish (mackerel, salmon, sardines) should be included at least once or twice a week If you feed fish at this rate, you are unlikely to need fatty acid supplements like fish oil. Canned fish usually has bone and salt in it, so leave out the bone meal and salt on fish days. Never feed raw salmon. Feed cats salmon once a week to provide necessary nutrients

Eggs are an excellent source of good fats, choline and protein. See our article on this site for more information about eggs!

Veggie Mix

Cut up your fruits and vegetables and puree them. What goes into your veggie and fruit mix changes with the season. In winter, broccoli, greens, apple, and carrot can be a good base. In summer there is much more variety. Then go for melons and zucchini and whatever looks good. Broccoli, celery, and greens (spinach, chard, collards, broccoli, kale, “mixed baby field greens”) are an easy combination.  Zucchini, peppers, cucumber, and parsley are another. Fresh parsley is a great source of vitamin C! Apple, orange, carrot, berries, pumpkin, melons of all kinds, pears, papaya are all excellent choices.

Cook sweet potatoes, green beans, and other starchy vegetables: they are better digested if cooked. Canned pumpkin is an easy addition.

It’s easy to blend up big batch of veggie mix at a time and freeze it. However, because the produce is raw, it does not have a long freezer life. Enzymes continue to act even at freezing temperatures. Make about what you can use in a month, and freeze in containers that you can use in a couple of days. Cooking halts enzyme action. If the mix is cooked, it will last longer in the freezer.

The veggie mixes below are just examples. Your mix will be customized to the needs and preferences of your animals, and to seasonal variation of produce. Vegetables with a lot of color are the best nutrition buy. Broccoli, for example, has more vitamins than cabbage, in the same veggie family.

Veggie mix 1

Veggie mix 2  

Veggie mix 3

1# broccoli

1.5# zucchini

1# blanched green beans

4 oz celery

4 oz chard

4 oz. romaine

4 oz  carrot

4 oz. ripe pepper, red or green

6 oz tomato

6 oz apple

6 oz honeydew

5 oz watermelon

2 oz. raspberries

2 oz blueberries

1 oz piece papaya

Essential Inclusions for a Fresh Food Diet

Bone, bonemeal, or MCHA for calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium.

Per pound of 90% lean meat mix, add 2 teaspoons of bone meal or MCHA. MCHA is freeze dried bone, usually organic from New Zealand. If you’re preparing organic food, this is the product to use.

Do not use eggshell powder instead of bone meal or MCHA. It isn’t the same thing. “Experts” who recommend this have not done the calculations necessary to make this balance correct!

Salt is missing in home-made diets because we don’t feed blood (and some blood-rich organs). Add 1/8 teaspoon, slightly heaping, of sea salt to 1# of meat mix. If you use canned fish with salt, no need for added salt in that meal.

Rice bran provides manganese, iron, zinc and other essential trace minerals.

Good additions, but not essential.

Digestive enzymes with Pancreatin provide digestive support and enzymes that are missing when all parts of the prey animals are not fed.

Glandular Powders also help to cover internal organs and body parts we don’t feed. Heart and liver are included in the daily diet, but not the smaller and harder to find organs. We are not feeding whole animals:  so including the missing parts will get the diet closer to the prey model. Pet’s Friend makes a good pet product, “Pet G.O”.

Ground Brazil nuts, almonds, hazelnuts

A good source of trace minerals, vitamin E and high quality fats.

How much food does it take?

Every animal is different. Young dogs and small dogs eat more for their size. They may eat 3-5% of their body weight in prepared food a day, or more for puppies.  Older and less active dogs may thrive on 2-3% of body weight. Weigh your animal when you start to prepare your own food. If he needs to lose, take it slow. Weigh him frequently to be sure you are feeding the right amount to maintain optimum weight.

Dogs fed fattier meats need less food than those fed lean meats, but lean meats will provide a diet that is in the natural balance for dogs and cats, with more calories coming from protein than fat.

Treats

Eliminate “junk food” treats. Many “problems” that don’t go away when dogs are switched to fresh food are traced to treats – we forget to include them in what we count as food! Dogs and cats don’t know the difference. Feed them real food. They like it better anyway.

Food for dogs and cats is really pretty simple. It does take some time. Take that time, and you will be confident that your animals are eating as well as you are. Maybe better!

© Steve Brown and Beth Taylor 2007

Authors of ‘See Spot Live Longer’ Visit their website: www.seespotlivelonger.com


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Get The Facts:

What’s Really in Pet Food

Updated May 2007

Plump whole chickens, choice cuts of beef, fresh grains, and all the wholesome nutrition your dog or cat will ever need.

These are the images pet food manufacturers promulgate through the media and advertising. This is what the $16.1 billion per year U.S. pet food industry wants consumers to believe they are buying when they purchase their products.

This report explores the differences between what consumers think they are buying and what they are actually getting. It focuses in very general terms on the most visible name brands — the pet food labels that are mass-distributed to supermarkets and discount stores — but there are many highly respected brands that may be guilty of the same offenses.

What most consumers don’t know is that the pet food industry is an extension of the human food and agriculture industries. Pet food provides a convenient way for slaughterhouse offal, grains considered “unfit for human consumption,” and similar waste products to be turned into profit. This waste includes intestines, udders, heads, hooves, and possibly diseased and cancerous animal parts.

The Players

The pet food market has been dominated in the last few years by the acquisition of big companies by even bigger companies. With $15 billion a year at stake in the U.S. and rapidly expanding foreign markets, it’s no wonder that some are greedy for a larger piece of the pie.

  • Nestlé’s bought Purina to form Nestlé Purina Petcare Company (Fancy Feast, Alpo, Friskies, Mighty Dog, Dog Chow, Cat Chow, Puppy Chow, Kitten Chow, Beneful, One, ProPlan, DeliCat, HiPro, Kit’n’Kaboodle, Tender Vittles, Purina Veterinary Diets).
  • Del Monte gobbled up Heinz (MeowMix, Gravy Train, Kibbles ’n Bits, Wagwells, 9Lives, Cycle, Skippy, Nature’s Recipe, and pet treats Milk Bone, Pup-Peroni, Snausages, Pounce).
  • MasterFoods owns Mars, Inc., which consumed Royal Canin (Pedigree, Waltham’s, Cesar, Sheba, Temptations, Goodlife Recipe, Sensible Choice, Excel).

Other major pet food makers are not best known for pet care, although many of their household and personal care products do use ingredients derived from animal by-products:

  • Procter and Gamble (P&G) purchased The Iams Company (Iams, Eukanuba) in 1999. P&G shortly thereafter introduced Iams into grocery stores, where it did very well.
  • Colgate-Palmolive bought Hill’s Science Diet (founded in 1939) in 1976 (Hill’s Science Diet, Prescription Diets, Nature’s Best).

Private labelers (who make food for “house” brands like Kroger and Wal-Mart) and co-packers (who produce food for other pet food makers) are also major players. Three major companies are Doane Pet Care, Diamond, and Menu Foods; they produce food for dozens of private label and brand names. Interestingly, all 3 of these companies have been involved in pet food recalls that sickened or killed many pets.

Many major pet food companies in the United States are subsidiaries of gigantic multinational corporations. From a business standpoint, pet food fits very well with companies making human products. The multinationals have increased bulk-purchasing power; those that make human food products have a captive market in which to capitalize on their waste products; and pet food divisions have a more reliable capital base and, in many cases, a convenient source of ingredients.

The Pet Food Institute — the trade association of pet food manufacturers — has acknowledged the use of by-products in pet foods as additional income for processors and farmers: “The growth of the pet food industry not only provided pet owners with better foods for their pets, but also created profitable additional markets for American farm products and for the byproducts of the meat packing, poultry, and other food industries which prepare food for human consumption.”1

Label Basics

There are special labeling requirements for pet food, all of which are contained in the annually revised Official Publication of AAFCO.2 While AAFCO does not regulate pet food, it does provide model regulations and standards that are followed by U.S. pet food makers.

The name of the food provides the first indication of the food’s content. The use of the terms “all” or “100%” cannot be used “if the product contains more than one ingredient, not including water sufficient for processing, decharacterizing agents, or trace amounts of preservatives and condiments.”

The “95% Rule” applies when the ingredient(s) derived from animals, poultry, or fish constitutes at least 95% or more of the total weight of the product (or 70% excluding water for processing). Because all-meat diets are not nutritionally balanced and cause severe deficiencies if fed exclusively, they fell out of favor for many years. However, due to rising consumer interest in high quality meat products, several companies are now promoting 95% and 100% canned meats as a supplemental feeding option.

The “dinner” product is defined by the “25% Rule,” which applies when “an ingredient or a combination of ingredients constitutes at least 25% of the weight of the product (excluding water sufficient for processing)”, or at least 10% of the dry matter weight; and a descriptor such as “recipe,” “platter,” “entree,” and “formula.” A combination of ingredients included in the product name is permissible when each ingredient comprises at least 3% of the product weight, excluding water for processing, and the ingredient names appear in descending order by weight.

The “With” rule allows an ingredient name to appear on the label, such as “with real chicken,” as long as each such ingredient constitutes at least 3% of the food by weight, excluding water for processing.

The “flavor” rule allows a food to be designated as a certain flavor as long as the ingredient(s) are sufficient to “impart a distinctive characteristic” to the food. Thus, a “beef flavor” food may contain a small quantity of digest or other extract of tissues from cattle, or even an artificial flavor, without containing any actual beef meat at all.

The ingredient list is the other major key to what’s really in that bag or can. Ingredients must be listed in descending order of weight. The ingredient names are legally defined. For instance, “meat” refers to only cows, pigs, goats and sheep, and only includes specified muscle tissues. Detailed definitions are published in AAFCO’s Official Publication, revised annually, but can also be found in many places online.

The guaranteed analysis provides a very general guide to the composition of the food. Crude protein, fat, and fiber, and total moisture are required to be listed. Some companies also voluntarily list taurine, Omega fatty acids, magnesium, and other items that they deem important — by marketing standards.

Pet Food Standards and Regulations

The National Research Council (NRC) of the Academy of Sciences set the nutritional standards for pet food that were used by the pet food industry until the late 1980s. The original NRC standards were based on purified diets, and required feeding trials for pet foods claimed to be “complete” and “balanced.” The pet food industry found the feeding trials too restrictive and expensive, so AAFCO designed an alternate procedure for claiming the nutritional adequacy of pet food, by testing the food for compliance with “Nutrient Profiles.” AAFCO also created “expert committees” for canine and feline nutrition, which developed separate canine and feline standards.

While feeding trials are sometimes still done, they are expensive and time-consuming. A standard chemical analysis may also be used to make sure that a food meets the profiles. In either case, there will be a statement on the label stating which method was used. However, because of the “family rule” in the AAFCO book, a label can say that feeding tests were done if it is “similar” to a food that was actually tested on live animals. There is no way to distinguish the lead product from its “family members.” The label will also state whether the product is nutritionally adequate (complete and balanced), and what life stage (adult or growth) the food is for. A food that says “all life stages” meets the growth standards and can be fed to all ages.

Chemical analysis, however, does not address the palatability, digestibility, or biological availability of nutrients in pet food. Thus it is unreliable for determining whether a food will provide an animal with sufficient nutrients. To compensate for the limitations of chemical analysis, AAFCO added a “safety factor,” which was to exceed the minimum amount of nutrients required to meet the complete and balanced requirements.

In 2006, new NRC standards were published; but it will take several years for AAFCO’s profiles to be updated and adopted, let alone accepted by the states.

The pet food industry loves to say that it’s more highly regulated than human food, but that’s just not true. Pet food exists in a bit of a regulatory vacuum; laws are on the books, but enforcement is another story. The FDA has nominal authority over pet foods shipped across state lines. But the real “enforcers” are the feed control officials in each state. They are the ones who actually look at the food and, in many instances, run basic tests to make sure the food meets its Guaranteed Analysis, the chart on the label telling how much protein, fat, moisture, and fiber are present. But regulation and enforcement vary tremendously from state to state. Some, like Texas, Minnesota, and Kentucky, run extensive tests and strictly enforce their laws; others, like California, do neither.

The Manufacturing Process: How Pet Food Is Made

Dry Food

The vast majority of dry food is made with a machine called an extruder. First, materials are blended in accordance with a recipe created with the help of computer programs that provide the nutrient content of each proposed ingredient. For instance, corn gluten meal has more protein than wheat flour. Because the extruder needs a consistent amount of starch and low moisture to work properly, dry ingredients — such as rendered meat-and-bone-meal, poultry by-product meal, grains, and flours — predominate.

The dough is fed into the screws of an extruder. It is subjected to steam and high pressure as it is pushed through dies that determine the shape of the final product, much like the nozzles used in cake decorating. As the hot, pressurized dough exits the extruder, it is cut by a set of rapidly whirling knives into tiny pieces. As the dough reaches normal air pressure, it expands or “puffs” into its final shape. The food is allowed to dry, and then is usually sprayed with fat, digests, or other compounds to make it more palatable. When it is cooled, it can be bagged.

Although the cooking process kills bacteria in the ingredients, the final product can pick up more bacteria during the subsequent drying, coating, and packaging process. Some experts warn that getting dry food wet can allow the bacteria on the surface to multiply and make pets sick. Do not mix dry food with water, milk, canned food, or other liquids.

A few dog foods are baked at high temperatures (over 500°F) rather than extruded. This produces a sheet of dense, crunchy material that is then broken into irregular chunks, much like crumbling crackers into soup. It is relatively palatable without the sprayed-on fats and other enhancers needed on extruded dry food.

Semi-moist foods and many pet treats are also made with an extruder. To be appealing to consumers and to keep their texture, they contain many additives, colorings, and preservatives; they are not a good choice for a pet’s primary diet.

Wet Food

Wet or canned food begins with ground ingredients mixed with additives. If chunks are required, a special extruder forms them. Then the mixture is cooked and canned. The sealed cans are then put into containers resembling pressure cookers and commercial sterilization takes place. Some manufacturers cook the food right in the can.

Wet foods are quite different in content from dry or semi-moist foods. While many canned foods contain by-products of various sorts, they are “fresh” and not rendered or processed (although they are often frozen for transport and storage). Wet foods usually contain much more protein, and it’s often a little higher quality, than dry foods. They also have more moisture, which is better for cats. They are packaged in cans or pouches.

Comparing Food Types

Because of the variation in water content, it is impossible to directly compare labels from different kinds of food without a mathematical conversion to “dry matter basis.” The numbers can be very deceiving. For instance, a canned food containing 10% protein actually has much more protein than a dry food with 30% protein.

To put the foods on a level playing field, first calculate the dry matter content by subtracting the moisture content given on the label from 100%. Then divide the ingredient by the dry matter content. For example, a typical bag of dry cat food contains 30% protein on the label, but 32% on a dry-matter basis (30% divided by its dry matter content, 100-6% moisture = 94%). A can of cat food might contain 12% protein on the label, but almost 43% on a dry-matter basis (12% divided by its dry matter content, 100-72% moisture = 28%). Dry food typically contains less than 10% water, while canned food contains 78% or more water.

Pet Food Ingredients

Animal Protein

Dogs and cats are carnivores, and do best on a meat-based diet. The protein used in pet food comes from a variety of sources. When cattle, swine, chickens, lambs, or other animals are slaughtered, lean muscle tissue is trimmed away from the carcass for human consumption, along with the few organs that people like to eat, such as tongues and tripe.

However, about 50% of every food animal does not get used in human foods. Whatever remains of the carcass — heads, feet, bones, blood, intestines, lungs, spleens, livers, ligaments, fat trimmings, unborn babies, and other parts not generally consumed by humans — is used in pet food, animal feed, fertilizer, industrial lubricants, soap, rubber, and other products. These “other parts” are known as “by-products.” By-products are used in feed for poultry and livestock as well as in pet food.

The nutritional quality of by-products, meals, and digests can vary from batch to batch. James Morris and Quinton Rogers, of the University of California at Davis Veterinary School, assert that, “[pet food] ingredients are generally by-products of the meat, poultry and fishing industries, with the potential for a wide variation in nutrient composition. Claims of nutritional adequacy of pet foods based on the current Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO) nutrient allowances (‘profiles’) do not give assurances of nutritional adequacy and will not until ingredients are analyzed and bioavailability values are incorporated.”3

Meat or poultry “by-products” are very common in wet pet foods. Remember that “meat” refers to only cows, swine, sheep, and goats. Since sheep and goats are rare compared to the 37 million cows and 100 million hogs slaughtered for food every year, nearly all meat by-products come from cattle and pigs.

The better brands of pet food, such as many “super-premium,” “natural,” and “organic” varieties, do not use by-products. On the label, you’ll see one or more named meats among the first few ingredients, such as “turkey” or “lamb.” These meats are still mainly leftover scraps; in the case of poultry, bones are allowed, so “chicken” consists mainly of backs and frames—the spine and ribs, minus their expensive breast meat. The small amount of meat left on the bones is the meat in the pet food. Even with this less-attractive source, pet food marketers are very tricky when talking about meat, so this is explained further in the section on “Marketing Magic” below.

Meat meals, poultry meals, by-product meals, and meat-and-bone meal are common ingredients in dry pet foods. The term “meal” means that these materials are not used fresh, but have been rendered. While there are chicken, turkey, and poultry by-product meals there is no equivalent term for mammal “meat by-product meal” — it is called “meat-and-bone-meal.” It may also be referred to by species, such as “beef-and-bone-meal” or “pork-and-bone-meal.”

What is rendering? As defined by Webster’s Dictionary, to render is “to process as for industrial use: to render livestock carcasses and to extract oil from fat, blubber, etc., by melting.” In other words, raw materials are dumped into large vat and boiled for several hours. Rendering separates fat, removes water, and kills bacteria, viruses, parasites, and other organisms. However, the high temperatures used (270°F/130°C) can alter or destroy natural enzymes and proteins found in the raw ingredients.

Because of persistent rumors that rendered by-products contain dead dogs and cats, the FDA conducted a study looking for pentobarbital, the most common euthanasia drug, in pet foods. They found it. Ingredients that were most commonly associated with the presence of pentobarbital were meat-and-bone-meal and animal fat. However, they also used very sensitive tests to look for canine and feline DNA, which were not found. Industry insiders admit that rendered pets and roadkill were used in pet food some years ago. Although there are still no laws or regulations against it, the practice is uncommon today, and pet food companies universally deny that their products contain any such materials. However, so-called “4D” animals (dead, dying, diseased, disabled) were only recently banned for human consumption and are still legitimate ingredients for pet food.

Vegetable Protein

The amount of grain and vegetable products used in pet food has risen dramatically over time. Plant products now replace a considerable proportion of the meat that was used in the earliest commercial pet foods. This has led to severe nutritional deficiencies that have been corrected along the way, although many animals died before science caught up.

Most dry foods contain a large amount of cereal grain or starchy vegetables to provide texture. These high-carbohydrate plant products also provide a cheap source of “energy” — the rest of us call it “calories.” Gluten meals are high-protein extracts from which most of the carbohydrate has been removed. They are often used to boost protein percentages without expensive animal-source ingredients. Corn gluten meal is the most commonly used for this purpose. Wheat gluten is also used to create shapes like cuts, bites, chunks, shreds, flakes, and slices, and as a thickener for gravy. In most cases, foods containing vegetable proteins are among the poorer quality foods.

A recent fad, “low-carb” pet food, has some companies steering away from grains, and using potatoes, green peas, and other starchy vegetables as a substitute. Except for animals that are allergic to grains, dry low-carb diets offer no particular advantage to pets. They also tend to be very high in fat and, if fed free-choice, will result in weight gain. Canned versions are suitable for prevention and treatment of feline diabetes, and as part of a weight loss program, as well as for maintenance.

Animal and Poultry Fat

There’s a unique, pungent odor to a new bag of dry pet food — what is the source of that smell? It is most often rendered animal fat, or vegetable fats and oils deemed inedible for humans. For example, used restaurant grease was rendered and routed to pet foods for several years, but a more lucrative market is now in biodiesel fuel production.

These fats are sprayed directly onto extruded kibbles and pellets to make an otherwise bland or distasteful product palatable. The fat also acts as a binding agent to which manufacturers add other flavor enhancers such as “animal digests” made from processed by-products. Pet food scientists have discovered that animals love the taste of these sprayed fats. Manufacturers are masters at getting a dog or a cat to eat something she would normally turn up her nose at.

What Happened to the Nutrients?

Cooking and other processing of meat and by-products used in pet food can greatly diminish their nutritional value, although cooking increases the digestibility of cereal grains and starchy vegetables.

To make pet food nutritious, pet food manufacturers must “fortify” it with vitamins and minerals. Why? Because the ingredients they are using are not wholesome, their quality may be extremely variable, and the harsh manufacturing practices destroy many of the nutrients the food had to begin with.

Proteins are especially vulnerable to heat, and become damaged, or “denatured,” when cooked. Because dry foods ingredients are cooked twice — first during rendering and again in the extruder — problems are much more common than with canned or homemade foods. Altered proteins may contribute to food intolerances, food allergies, and inflammatory bowel disease.

Additives in Processed Pet Foods

Many chemicals are added to commercial pet foods to improve the taste, stability, characteristics, or appearance of the food. Additives provide no nutritional value. Additives include emulsifiers to prevent water and fat from separating, antioxidants to prevent fat from turning rancid, and artificial colors and flavors to make the product more attractive to consumers and more palatable to their companion animals.

A wide variety of additives are allowed in animal feed and pet food, not counting vitamins and minerals. Not all of them are actually used in pet food. Additives can be specifically approved, or they can fall into the category of “Generally Recognized as Safe” (GRAS).

Anticaking agents
Antigelling agents
Antimicrobial agents
Antioxidants
Color additives
Condiments
Curing agents
Drying agents
Emulsifiers
Essential oils
Flavor enhancers
Flavoring agents
Grinding agents
Humectants
Leavening agents
Lubricants
Palatants
Pelleting agents and binders
Petroleum derivatives
pH control agents
Preservatives
Seasonings
Spices
Stabilizers
Sweeteners
Texturizers
Thickeners

Chemical vs. Natural Preservatives

All commercial pet foods must be preserved so they stay fresh and appealing to our animal companions. Canning is itself a preserving process, so canned foods need little or no additional help. Some preservatives are added to ingredients or raw materials by the suppliers, and others may be added by the manufacturer. The U.S. Coast Guard, for instance, requires fish meal to be heavily preserved with ethoxyquin or equivalent antioxidant. Evidently, spoiling fish meal creates such intense heat that ship explosions and fires resulted.

Because manufacturers need to ensure that dry foods have a long shelf life (typically 12 months) to remain edible through shipping and storage, fats used in pet foods are preserved with either synthetic or “natural” preservatives. Synthetic preservatives include butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT), propyl gallate, propylene glycol (also used as a less-toxic version of automotive antifreeze), and ethoxyquin. For these antioxidants, there is little information documenting their toxicity, safety, interactions, or chronic use in pet foods that may be eaten every day for the life of the animal. Propylene glycol was banned in cat food because it causes anemia in cats, but it is still allowed in dog food.

Potentially cancer-causing agents such as BHA, BHT, and ethoxyquin are permitted at relatively low levels. The use of these chemicals in pet foods has not been thoroughly studied, and long term build-up of these agents may ultimately be harmful. Due to questionable data in the original study on its safety, ethoxyquin’s manufacturer, Monsanto, was required to perform a new, more rigorous study. This was completed in 1996. Even though Monsanto found no significant toxicity associated with its own product, in July 1997 the FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine requested that manufacturers voluntarily reduce the maximum level for ethoxyquin by half, to 75 parts per million. While some pet food critics and veterinarians believe that ethoxyquin is a major cause of disease, skin problems, and infertility in dogs, others claim it is the safest, strongest, most stable preservative available for pet food. Ethoxyquin is approved for use in human food for preserving spices, such as cayenne and chili powder, at a level of 100 ppm — but it would be very difficult for even the most hard-core spice lover to consume as much chili powder every day as a dog would eat dry food. Ethoxyquin has never been tested for safety in cats. Despite this, it is commonly used in veterinary diets for both cats and dogs.

Many pet food makers have responded to consumer concern, and are now using “natural” preservatives such as Vitamin C (ascorbate), Vitamin E (mixed tocopherols), and oils of rosemary, clove, or other spices, to preserve the fats in their products. The shelf life is shorter, however — only about 6 months.

Individual ingredients, such as fish meal, may have preservatives added before they reach the pet food manufacturer. Federal law requires fat preservatives to be disclosed on the label; however, pet food companies do not always comply with this law.

Danger Ahead

Potential Contaminants

Given the types of things manufacturers put in pet food, it is not surprising that bad things sometimes happen. Ingredients used in pet food are often highly contaminated with a wide variety of toxic substances. Some of these are destroyed by processing, but others are not.

  • Bacteria. Slaughtered animals, as well as those that have died because of disease, injury, or natural causes, are sources of meat, by-products, and rendered meals. An animal that died on the farm might not reach a rendering plant until days after its death. Therefore the carcass is often contaminated with bacteria such as Salmonella and E. coli. Dangerous E. Coli bacteria are estimated to contaminate more than 50% of meat meals. While the cooking process may kill bacteria, it does not eliminate the endotoxins some bacteria produce during their growth. These toxins can survive processing, and can cause sickness and disease. Pet food manufacturers do not test their products for bacterial endotoxins. Because sick or dead animals can be processed as pet foods, the drugs that were used to treat or euthanize them may still be present in the end product. Penicillin and pentobarbital are just two examples of drugs that can pass through processing unchanged. Antibiotics used in livestock production are also thought to contribute to antibiotic resistance in humans.
  • Mycotoxins. Toxins from mold or fungi are called mycotoxins. Modern farming practices, adverse weather conditions, and improper drying and storage of crops can contribute to mold growth. Pet food ingredients that are most likely to be contaminated with mycotoxins are grains such as wheat and corn, and fish meal.
  • Chemical Residue. Pesticides and fertilizers may leave residue on plant products. Grains that are condemned for human consumption by the USDA due to residue may legally be used, without limitation, in pet food.
  • GMOs. Genetically modified plant products are also of concern. By 2006, 89% of the planted area of soybeans, 83% of cotton, and 61% of maize (corn) in the U.S. were genetically modified varieties. Cottonseed meal is a common ingredient of cattle feed; soy and corn are used directly in many pet foods.
  • Acrylamide. This is a carcinogenic compound formed at cooking temperatures of about 250°F in foods containing certain sugars and the amino acid asparagine (found in large amounts in potatoes and cereal grains). It is formed in a chemical process called the Maillard reaction.4, 5 Most dry pet foods contain cereal grains or potatoes, and they are processed at high temperatures (200–300°F at high pressure during extrusion; baked foods are cooked at well over 500°F); these are perfect conditions for the Maillard reaction. In fact, the Maillard reaction is considered desirable in the production of pet food because it imparts a palatable taste, even though it reduces the bioavailability of some amino acids, including taurine and lysine.6 The content and potential effects of acrylamide formation in pet foods are unknown.

Pet Food Recalls

When things go really wrong and serious problems are discovered in pet food, the company usually works with the FDA to coordinate a recall of the affected products. While many recalls have been widely publicized, quite a few have not.

  • In 1995, Nature’s Recipe recalled almost a million pounds of dry dog and cat food after consumers complained that their pets were vomiting and losing their appetite. The problem was a fungus that produced vomitoxin contaminating the wheat.
  • In 1999, Doane Pet Care recalled more than a million bags of corn-based dry dog food contaminated with aflatoxin. Products included Ol’ Roy (Wal-Mart’s brand) and 53 other brands. This time, the toxin killed 25 dogs.
  • In 2000, Iams recalled 248,000 pounds of dry dog food distributed in 7 states due to excess DL-Methionine Amino Acid, a urinary acidifier.
  • In 2003, a recall was made by Petcurean “Go! Natural” pet food due to circumstantial association with some dogs suffering from liver disease; no cause was ever found.
  • In late 2005, a similar recall by Diamond Foods was announced; this time the moldy corn contained a particularly nasty fungal product called aflatoxin; 100 dogs died.
  • Also in 2005, 123,000 pounds of cat and dog treats were recalled due to Salmonella contamination.
  • In 2006, more than 5 million cans of Ol’ Roy, American Fare, and other dog foods distributed in the southeast were recalled by the manufacturer, Simmons Pet Food, because the cans’ enamel lining was flaking off into the food.
  • Also in 2006, Merrick Pet Care recalled almost 200,000 cans of “Wingalings” dog food when metal tags were found in some samples.
  • In the most deadly recall of 2006, 4 prescription canned dog and cat foods were recalled by Royal Canin (owned by Mars). The culprit was a serious overdose of Vitamin D that caused calcium deficiency and kidney disease.
  • In February 2007, the FDA issued a warning to consumers not to buy “Wild Kitty,” a frozen food containing raw meat. Routine testing by FDA had revealed Salmonella in the food. FDA specifically warned about the potential for illness in humans, not pets. There were no reports of illness or death of any pets, and the food was not recalled.
  • In March 2007, the most lethal pet food in history was the subject of the largest recall ever. Menu Foods recalled more than 100 brands including Iams, Eukanuba, Hill’s Science Diet, Purina Mighty Dog, and many store brands including Wal-Mart’s. Thousands of pets were sickened (the FDA received more than 17,000 reports) and an estimated 20% died from acute renal failure caused by the food. Cats were more frequently and more severely affected than dogs. The toxin was initially believed to be a pesticide, the rat poison “aminopterin” in one of the ingredients. In April, scientists discovered high levels of melamine, a chemical used in plastics and fertilizers, in wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate imported from China. The melamine had been purposefully added to the ingredients to falsely boost their protein content. Subsequent tests revealed that the melamine-tainted ingredients had also been used in feed for cows, pigs, and chickens and thousands of animals were quarantined and destroyed. In early May, scientists identified the cause of the rapid onset kidney disease that had appeared in dogs and cats as a reaction caused by the combination of melamine and cyanuric acid, both unauthorized chemicals. The fallout from this recall is ongoing as of May 2007 so please be sure to check the FDA website for the most recent updates.

Nutrition-Related Diseases

The idea that one pet food provides all the nutrition a companion animal will ever need for its entire life is a dangerous myth.

Today, the diets of cats and dogs are a far cry from the variable meat-based diets that their ancestors ate. The unpleasant results of grain-based, processed, year-in and year-out diets are common. Health problems associated with diet include:

  • Urinary tract disease. Plugs, crystals, and stones are more common in cats eating dry diets, due to the chronic dehydration and highly concentrated urine they cause. “Struvite” stones used to be the most common type in cats, but another more dangerous type, calcium oxalate, has increased and is now tied with struvite. Manipulation of manufactured cat food formulas to increase the acidity of urine has caused the switch. Dogs can also form stones as a result of their diet.
  • Kidney disease. Chronic dehydration associated with dry diets may also be a contributing factor in the development of kidney disease and chronic renal failure in older cats. Cats have a low thirst drive; in the wild they would get most of their water from their prey. Cats eating dry food do not drink enough water to make up for the lack of moisture in the food. Cats on dry food diets drink more water, but the total water intake of a cat eating canned food is twice as great.7
  • Dental disease. Contrary to the myth propagated by pet food companies, dry food is not good for teeth.8 Given that the vast majority of pets eat dry food, yet the most common health problem in pets is dental disease, this should be obvious. Humans do not floss with crackers, and dry food does not clean the teeth.
  • Obesity. Feeding recommendations or instructions on the packaging are sometimes inflated so that the consumer will end up feeding — and purchasing — more food. One of the most common health problems in pets, obesity, may also be related to high-carb, high-calorie dry foods. Both dogs and cats respond to low-carb wet food diets. Overweight pets are more prone to arthritis, heart disease, and diabetes. Dry cat food is now considered the cause of feline diabetes; prevention and treatment include switching to a high protein, high moisture, low-carb diet.
  • Chronic digestive problems. Chronic vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, and inflammatory bowel disease are among the most frequent illnesses treated. These are often the result of an allergy or intolerance to pet food ingredients. The market for “limited antigen” or “novel protein” diets is now a multi-million dollar business. These diets were formulated to address the increasing intolerance to commercial foods that pets have developed. Even so, an animal that tends to develop allergies can develop allergies to the new ingredients, too. One twist is the truly “hypoallergenic” food that has had all its proteins artificially chopped into pieces smaller than can be recognized and reacted to by the immune system. Yet there are documented cases of animals becoming allergic to this food, too. It is important to change brands, flavors, and protein sources every few months to prevent problems.
  • Bloat. Feeding only one meal per day can cause the irritation of the esophagus by stomach acid, and appears to be associated with gastric dilitation and volvulus (canine bloat). Feeding two or more smaller meals is better.
  • Heart disease. An often-fatal heart disease in cats and some dogs is now known to be caused by a deficiency of the amino acid taurine. Blindness is another symptom of taurine deficiency. This deficiency was due to inadequate amounts of taurine in cat food formulas, which in turn had occurred due to decreased amounts of animal proteins and increased reliance on carbohydrates. Cat foods are now supplemented with taurine. New research suggests that some dog breeds are susceptible to the same condition. Supplementing taurine may also be helpful for dogs, but as yet few manufacturers are adding extra taurine to dog food.
  • Hyperthyroidism. There is also evidence that hyperthyroidism in cats may be related to diet. This is a relatively new disease that first surfaced in the 1970s. Some experts theorize that excess iodine in commercial cat food is a factor. New research also points to a link between the disease and pop-top cans, and flavors including fish or “giblets.” This is a serious disease, and treatment is expensive.

Many nutritional problems appeared with the popularity of cereal-based commercial pet foods. Some have occurred because the diet was incomplete. Although several ingredients are now supplemented, we do not know what ingredients future researchers may discover that should have been supplemented in pet foods all along. Other problems may occur from reactions to additives. Others are a result of contamination with bacteria, mold, drugs, or other toxins. In some diseases the role of commercial pet food is understood; in others, it is not. The bottom line is that diets composed primarily of low quality cereals and rendered meals are not as nutritious or safe as you should expect for your cat or dog.

Pet Food Industry Secrets

Co-Packing

The 2007 Menu Foods recall brought to light some of the pet food industry’s dirtiest secrets.

Most people were surprised — and appalled — to learn that all Iams/Eukanuba canned foods are not made by The Iams Company at all. In fact, in 2003 Iams signed an exclusive 10-year contract for the production of 100% of its canned foods by Menu.

This type of deal is called “co-packing.” One company makes the food, but puts someone else’s label on it. This is a very common arrangement in the pet food industry. It was first illustrated by the Doane’s and Diamond recalls, when dozens of private labels were involved. But none were as large or as “reputable” as Iams, Eukanuba, Hill’s, Purina, Nutro, and other high-end, so-called “premium” foods.

The big question raised by this arrangement is whether or not there is any real difference between the expensive premium brands and the lowliest generics. The recalled products all contained the suspect ingredient, wheat gluten, but they also all contained by-products of some kind, including specified by-products such as liver or giblets.

It’s true that a pet food company that contracts with a co-packer can provide its own ingredients, or it can require the contractor to buy particular ingredients to use in its recipes. But part of the attraction of using a co-packer is that it can buy ingredients in larger bulk than any one pet food maker could on its own, making the process cheaper and the profits larger. It’s likely that with many of the ingredients that cross all types of pet foods, those ingredients are the same.

Are one company’s products — made in the same plant on the same equipment with ingredients called the same name — really “better” than another’s? That’s what the makers of expensive brands want you to think. The recalled premium brands claim that Menu makes their foods “according to proprietary recipes using specified ingredients,” and that “contract manufacturers must follow strict quality standards.” Indeed, the contracts undoubtedly include those points. But out in the real world, things may not go according to plan. How well are machines cleaned between batches, how carefully are ingredients mixed, and just how particular are minimum-wage workers in a dirty smelly job going to be about getting everything just perfect?

Whatever the differences are between cheap and high-end food, one thing is clear. The purchase price of pet food does not always determine whether a pet food is good or bad or even safe. However, the very cheapest foods can be counted on to have the very cheapest ingredients. For example, Ol’ Roy, Wal-Mart’s store brand, has now been involved in 3 serious recalls.

Menu manufactures canned foods for many companies that weren’t affected by the recall, including Nature's Variety, Wellness, Castor & Pollux, Newman's Own Organics, Wysong, Innova, and EaglePack. It’s easy to see from their ingredient lists that those products are made from completely different ingredients and proportions. Again, the issue of cleaning the machinery out between batches comes up, but hopefully nothing so lethal will pass from one food to another.

Animal Testing

Another unpleasant practice exposed by this recall is pet food testing on live animals. Menu's own lab animals, who were deliberately fed the tainted food, were the first known victims. Tests began on February 27 (already a week after the first reports); animals started to die painfully from kidney failure a few days later. After the first media reports, Menu quickly changed its story to call these experiments “taste tests.” But Menu has done live animal feeding, metabolic energy, palatability, and other tests for Iams and other companies for years. Videotapes reveal the animals’ lives in barren metal cages; callous treatment; invasive experiments; and careless cruelty.

Although feeding trials are not required for a food to meet the requirements for labeling a food “complete and balanced,” many manufacturers use live animals to perform palatability studies when developing a new pet food. One set of animals is fed a new food while a “control” group is fed a current formula. The total volume eaten is used as a gauge for the palatability of the food. Some companies use feeding trials, which are considered to be a much more accurate assessment of the actual nutritional value of the food. They keep large colonies of dogs and cats for this purpose, or use testing laboratories that have their own animals.

There is a new movement toward using companion animals in their homes for palatability and other studies. In 2006, The Iams Company announced that it was cutting the use of canine and feline lab animals by 70%. While it proclaims this moral victory, the real reasons for this switch are likely financial. Whatever the reasons, it is a very positive step for the animals.

Finally, it is important to remember that the contamination that occurred in the Menu Foods recall could have happened anywhere at any time. It was not Menu’s fault; the toxin was unusual and unexpected. All companies have quality control standards and they do test ingredients for common toxins before using them. They also test the final products. However, there is a baseline risk inherent in using the raw materials that go into pet foods. When there are 11 recalls in 12 years, it’s clear that “freak occurrences” are the rule, not the exception.

Marketing Magic

A trip down the pet food aisle will boggle the mind with all the wonderful claims made by pet food makers for their repertoire of products. Knowing the nature of the ingredients helps sort out some of the more outrageous claims, but what’s the truth behind all this hype?

  • Niche claims. Indoor cat, canine athlete, Persian, 7-year old, Bloodhound, or a pet with a tender tummy, too much flab, arthritis, or itchy feet — no matter what, there’s a food “designed” just for that pet’s personal needs. Niche marketing has arrived in a big way in the pet food industry. People like to feel special, and a product with specific appeal is bound to sell better than a general product like “puppy food.” The reality is that there are only two basic standards against which all pet foods are measured: adult and growth, which includes gestation and lactation. Everything else is marketing.
  • “Natural” and “Organic” claims. The definition of “natural” adopted by AAFCO is very broad, and allows for artificially processed ingredients that most of us would consider very unnatural indeed. The term “organic”, on the other hand, has a very strict legal definition under the USDA National Organic Program. However, some companies are adept at evading the intent of both of these rules. For instance, the name of the company or product may be intentionally misleading. Some companies use terms such as “Nature” or “Natural” or even “Organic” in the brand name, whether or not their products fit the definitions. Consumers should also be aware that the term “organic” does not imply anything at all about animal welfare; products from cows and chickens can be organic, yet the animals themselves are still just “production units” in enormous factory farms.
  • Ingredient quality claims. A lot of pet foods claim they contain “human grade” ingredients. This is a completely meaningless term — which is why the pet food companies get away with using it. The same applies to “USDA inspected” or similar phrases. The implication is that the food is made using ingredients that are passed by the USDA for human consumption, but there are many ways around this. For instance, a facility might be USDA-inspected during the day, but the pet food is made at night after the inspector goes home. The use of such terms should be viewed as a “Hype Alert.”
  • “Meat is the first ingredient” claim. A claim that a named meat (chicken, lamb, etc.) is the #1 ingredient is generally seen for dry food. Ingredients are listed on the label by weight, and raw chicken weighs a lot, since contains a lot of water. If you look further down the list, you’re likely to see ingredients such as chicken or poultry by-product meal, meat-and-bone meal, corn gluten meal, soybean meal, or other high-protein meal. Meals have had the fat and water removed, and basically consist of a dry, lightweight protein powder. It doesn’t take much raw chicken to weigh more than a great big pile of this powder, so in reality the food is based on the protein meal, with very little “chicken” to be found. This has become a very popular marketing gimmick, even in premium and “health food” type brands. Since just about everybody is now using it, any meaning it may have had is so watered-down that you may just as well ignore it.
  • Special ingredient claims. Many of the high-end pet foods today rely on the marketing appeal of people-food ingredients such as fruits, herbs, and vegetables. However, the amounts of these items actually present in the food are small; and the items themselves may be scraps and rejects from processors of human foods — not the whole, fresh ingredients they want you to picture. Such ingredients don’t provide a significant health benefit and are really a marketing gimmick.

Pet food marketing and advertising has become extremely sophisticated over the last few years. It’s important to know what is hype and what is real to make informed decisions about what to feed your pets.

What Consumers Can Do

  • Write or call pet food companies and the Pet Food Institute and express your concerns about commercial pet foods. Demand that manufacturers improve the quality of ingredients in their products.
  • Print out a copy of this report for your veterinarian to further his or her knowledge about commercial pet food.
  • Direct your family and friends with companion animals to this website, to alert them of the dangers of commercial pet food. Print out copies of our Fact Sheet on Selecting a Good Commercial Food. (You may also download this fact sheet as a pdf.)
  • Stop buying commercial pet food; or at least stop buying dry food. Dry foods have been the subject of many more recalls, and have many adverse health effects. If that is not possible, reduce the quantity of commercial pet food and supplement with fresh, organic foods, especially meat. Purchase one or more of the many books available on pet nutrition and make your own food. Be sure that a veterinarian or a nutritionist has checked the recipes to ensure that they are balanced for long-term use.
  • If you would like to learn about how to make healthy food for your companion animal, read up on "Sample Diets," which contains simple recipes and important nutritional information.
  • Please be aware that Born Free USA is not a veterinary hospital, clinic, or service. Born Free USA does not and will not offer any medical advice. If you have concerns about your companion animal’s health or nutritional requirements, please consult your veterinarian.

Because pet food manufacturers frequently change the formulations of their products and Born Free USA would not have conducted the necessary testing, we are unable to offer endorsements for particular brands of pet food. Many of our staff choose to make their own pet food or to purchase natural or organic products found in most feed and specialist stores but we cannot recommend brands that would be right for your companion animal or animals.

For Further Reading about Animal Nutrition

Born Free USA recommends the following books (listed in alphabetical order by author), many of which include recipes for home-prepared diets:

  • Michelle Bernard. 2003. Raising Cats Naturally — How to Care for Your Cat the Way Nature Intended. Available at www.raisingcatsnaturally.com.
  • Chiclet T. Dog and Jan Rasmusen. 2006. Scared Poopless: The Straight Scoop on Dog Care. Available at www.dogs4dogs.com. ISBN-10: 0977126501, ISBN-13: 978-0977126507.
  • Rudi Edalati. 2001. Barker’s Grub: Easy, Wholesome Home-Cooking for Dogs. ISBN-10: 0609804421, ISBN-13: 978-0609804421.
  • Jean Hofve, DVM. 2007. What Cats Should Eat. Available at www.littlebigcat.com.
  • Richard H. Pitcairn, DVM, and Susan Hubble Pitcairn. 2005. Dr. Pitcairn’s New Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs and Cats. Rodale Press, Inc. ISBN-10: 157954973X, ISBN-13: 978-1579549732. Note: The recipes for cats were not revised in this new edition and date back to 2000; they may contain too much grain, according to recent research.
  • Kate Solisti. 2004. The Holistic Animal Handbook: A Guidebook to Nutrition, Health, and Communication. Council Oaks Books. ISBN-10: 1571781536, ISBN-13: 978-1571781536.
  • Donald R. Strombeck. 1999. Home-Prepared Dog & Cat Diets: The Healthful Alternative. Iowa State University Press. ISBN-10: 0813821495, ISBN-13: 978-0813821498. Note: Veterinary nutritionists have suggested that the taurine and calcium are too low in some of these recipes. Clam juice and sardines are poor sources of taurine; use taurine capsules instead.
  • Celeste Yarnall. 2000, Natural Cat Care: A Complete Guide to Holistic Health Care for Cats; and 1998, Natural Dog Care: A Complete Guide to Holistic Health Care for Dogs. Available at www.celestialpets.com.

The books listed above are a fraction of all the titles currently available, and the omission of a title does not necessarily mean it is not useful for further reading about animal nutrition.

Please note: Born Free USA is not a bookseller, and cannot sell or send these books to you. Please contact your local book retailer or an online bookstore, who can supply these books based on the ISBN provided for each title.

Who to Write

AAFCO Pet Food Committee
David Syverson, Chair
Minnesota Department of Agriculture
Dairy and Food Inspection Division
625 Robert Street North
St. Paul, MN 55155-2538
www.aafco.org

FDA — Center for Veterinary Medicine
Sharon Benz
7500 Standish Place
Rockville, MD 20855
301-594-1728
www.fda.gov/cvm/

Pet Food Institute
2025 M Street, NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC 20036
202-367-1120
202-367-2120 fax


References

Association of American Feed Control Officials Incorporated. Official Publication 2007. Atlanta: AAFCO, 2007.

Case LP, Carey DP, Hirakawa DA. Canine and Feline Nutrition: A Resource for Companion Animal Professionals. St. Louis: Mosby, 1995.

FDA Enforcement Reports, 1998-2007. www.fda.gov.

Hand MS, Thatcher CD, Remillard RL, et al., eds. Small Animal Clinical Nutrition, 4th Edition. 2002. Topeka, KS: Mark Morris Institute.

Logan, et al., Dental Disease, in: Hand et al., ibid.

Mahmoud AL. Toxigenic fungi and mycotoxin content in poultry feedstuff ingredients. J Basic Microbiol, 1993; 33(2): 101–4.

Morris JG, and Rogers QR. Assessment of the Nutritional Adequacy of Pet Foods Through the Life Cycle. Journal of Nutrition, 1994; 124: 2520S–2533S.

Mottram DS, Wedzicha BL, Dodson AT. Acrylamide is formed in the Maillard reaction. Nature, 2002 Oct 3; 419(6906): 448–9.

Pet Food Institute. Fact Sheet 1994. Washington: Pet Food Institute, 1994.

Phillips T. Rendered Products Guide. Petfood Industry, January/February 1994, 12–17, 21.

Roudebush P. Pet food additives. J Amer Vet Med Assoc, 203 (1993): 1667–1670.

Seefelt SL, Chapman TE. Body water content and turnover in cats fed dry and canned rations. Am J Vet Res, 1979 Feb; 40(2): 183–5.

Strombeck, DR. Home-Prepared Dog and Cat Foods: The Healthful Alternative. Ames: Iowa State University Press, 1999.

Tareke E, Rydberg P, Karlsson P, et al. Analysis of acrylamide, a carcinogen formed in heated foodstuffs. J Agric Food Chem, 2002 Aug 14; 50(17): 4998–5006.

Zoran D. The carnivore connection to nutrition in cats. J Amer Vet Med Assoc, 2002 Dec 1; 221(11): 1559–67.

Printed with permission from Animal Protection Institute (API 2004)

Born Free USA’s copyright  — www.bornfreeusa.org


Notes

  1. Pet Food Institute. Fact Sheet 1994. Washington: Pet Food Institute, 1994.
  2. Association of American Feed Control Officials. Official Publication, 2007. Regulation PE3, 120–121.
  3. Morris, James G., and Quinton R. Rogers. Assessment of the Nutritional Adequacy of Pet Foods Through the Life Cycle. Journal of Nutrition, 124 (1994): 2520S–2533S.
  4. Tareke E, Rydberg P, Karlsson P, et al. Analysis of acrylamide, a carcinogen formed in heated foodstuffs. J Agric Food Chem, 2002 Aug 14; 50(17): 4998–5006.
  5. Mottram DS, Wedzicha BL, Dodson AT. Acrylamide is formed in the Maillard reaction. Nature, 2002 Oct 3; 419(6906): 448–9.
  6. Hand MS, Thatcher CD, Remillard RL, et al., eds. Small Animal Clinical Nutrition, 4th Edition. 2002. Topeka, KS: Mark Morris Institute.
  7. Seefelt SL, Chapman TE. Body water content and turnover in cats fed dry and canned rations. Am J Vet Res, 1979 Feb; 40(2): 183–5.
  8. Logan, et al., Dental Disease, in: Hand et al., eds., Small Animal Clinical Nutrition, Fourth Edition. Topeka, KS: Mark Morris Institute, 2000

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