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WHAT'S REALLY IN DOG FOOD 
The information contained in page
report will reveal to you the shocking truth about what's in your dog's food.
Did you know...
- The maximum life span of a DOG
is estimated to be about 27 years: Yet, the average dog lives only
approximately 13 years?
- The maximum life span of a CAT
is estimated to be about 25-30 years: Yet, the average cat lives only
approximately 14 years?
Pet Food Industry advertising
promotes the idea that, to keep pets healthy, one must feed them commercially
formulated pet foods. But such a diet has been proven to contribute to cancer,
skin problems, allergies, hypertension, kidney and liver failure, heart disease
and dental problems. Please read the information very carefully, as it can help
you to increase your pet's lifespan, overall health and daily well being.
| What's
Really in Your Pet Food |
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 $11 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 market for
slaughterhouse offal, grains considered "unfit for human consumption," and
similar waste products to be turned into profit. This waste includes
intestines, udders, esophagi, and possibly diseased and cancerous animal parts.
Three of the five major pet food companies in the United States are
subsidiaries of major multinational companies: Nestlé (Alpo, Fancy
Feast, Friskies, Mighty Dog, and Ralston Purina products such as Dog Chow,
ProPlan, and Purina One), Heinz (9 Lives, Amore, Gravy Train, Kibbles-n-Bits,
Nature's Recipe), Colgate-Palmolive (Hill's Science Diet Pet Food). Other
leading companies include Procter & Gamble (Eukanuba and Iams), Mars (Kal
Kan, Mealtime, Pedigree, Sheba, Waltham's), and Nutro. From a business
standpoint, multinational companies owning pet food manufacturing companies is
an ideal relationship. 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.
There are hundreds of different pet foods available in this country.
And while many of the foods on the market are similar, not all of the pet food
manufacturing companies use poor quality or potentially dangerous
ingredients.
| General
Pet Food Ingredients |
It would be impossible
for a company that sells a generic brand of dog food at $9.95 for a 40-lb. bag
to use quality protein and grain in its food. The cost of purchasing quality
ingredients would be much higher than the selling price. The protein used in
pet food comes from a variety of sources. When cattle, swine, chickens, lambs,
or any number of other animals are slaughtered, the choice cuts such as lean
muscle tissue are trimmed away from the carcass for human consumption. However,
about 50% of every food-producing animal does not get used in human foods.
Whatever remains of the carcass - bones, blood, intestines, lungs, ligaments,
and almost all the other parts not generally consumed by humans - is used in
pet food, animal feed, and other products. These "other parts" are known as
"by-products" or other names on pet food labels. The ambiguous labels list the
ingredients, but do not provide a definition for the products listed. The Pet
Food Institute - the trade association of pet food manufacturers - acknowledges
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."
Many of these remnants provide a
questionable source of nourishment for our animals. The nutritional quality of
meat and poultry by-products, meals, and digests can vary from batch to batch.
James Morris and Quinton Rogers, two professors with the Department of
Molecular Biosciences, University of California at Davis Veterinary School of
Medicine, assert that, "There is virtually no information on the
bioavailability of nutrients for companion animals in many of the common
dietary ingredients used in pet foods. These 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." Meat and poultry meals, by-product meals, and meat-and-bone
meal are common ingredients in pet foods.
The term "meal" means that these
materials are not used fresh, but have been rendered. What is rendering?
Rendering, as defined by Webster's Dictionary,is "to process as for industrial
use: to render livestock carcasses and to extract oil from fat, blubber, etc.,
by melting." Home-made chicken soup, with its thick layer of fat that forms
over the top when the soup is cooled, is a sort of mini-rendering process.
Rendering separates fat-soluble from water-soluble and solid materials, and
kills bacterial contaminants, but may alter or destroy some of the natural
enzymes and proteins found in the raw ingredients. What can the feeding of such
products do to your companion animal? Some veterinarians claim that feeding
slaughterhouse wastes to animals increases their risk of getting cancer and
other degenerative diseases. The cooking methods used by pet food manufacturers
- such as rendering and extruding (a heat- and-pressure system used to "puff"
dry foods into nuggets or kibbles) - do not necessarily destroy the hormones
used to fatten livestock or increase milk production, or drugs such as
antibiotics or the barbiturates used to euthanize animals.
| Specific
Pet Food Ingredients |
Animal and Poultry Fat You may have
noticed a unique, pungent odor when you open a new bag of pet food -- what is
the source of that delightful smell? It is most often rendered animal fat,
restaurant grease, or other oils too rancid or deemed inedible for humans.
Restaurant grease has become a major component of feed grade animal fat over
the last fifteen years. This grease, often held in fifty-gallon drums, is
usually kept outside for weeks, exposed to extreme temperatures with no regard
for its future use. "Fat blenders" or rendering companies then pick up this
used grease and mix the different types of fat together, stabilize them with
powerful antioxidants to retard further spoilage, and then sell the blended
products to pet food companies and other end users. These fats are sprayed
directly onto dried kibbles or extruded 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 digests. 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. Wheat, Soy, Corn, Peanut Hulls, and Other
Vegetable Protein The amount of grain products used in pet food has risen over
the last decade. Once considered filler by the pet food industry, cereal and
grain products now replace a considerable proportion of the meat that was used
in the first commercial pet foods.
The availability of nutrients in
these products is dependent upon the digestibility of the grain. The amount and
type of carbohydrate in pet food determines the amount of nutrient value the
animal actually gets. Dogs and cats can almost completely absorb carbohydrates
from some grains, such as white rice. Up to 20% of the nutritional value of
other grains can escape digestion. The availability of nutrients for wheat,
beans, and oats is poor. The nutrients in potatoes and corn are far less
available than those in rice. Some ingredients, such as peanut hulls, are used
for filler or fiber, and have no significant nutritional value. Two of the top
three ingredients in pet foods, particularly dry foods, are almost always some
form of grain products. Pedigree Performance Food for Dogs lists Ground Corn,
Chicken By-Product Meal, and Corn Gluten Meal as its top three ingredients. 9
Lives Crunchy Meals for cats lists Ground Yellow Corn, Corn Gluten Meal, and
Poultry By-Product Meal as its first three ingredients.
Since cats are true carnivores -
they must eat meat to fulfill certain physiological needs - one may wonder why
we are feeding a corn-based product to them. The answer is that corn is much
cheaper than meat. In 1995, Nature's Recipe pulled thousands of tons of dog
food off the shelf after consumers complained that their dogs were vomiting and
losing their appetite. Nature's Recipe's loss amounted to $20 million.
The problem was a fungus that
produced vomitoxin (an aflatoxin or "mycotoxin," a toxic substance produced by
mold) contaminating the wheat. In 1999, another fungal toxin triggered the
recall of dry dog food made by Doane Pet Care at one of its plants, including
Ol' Roy (Wal-Mart's brand) and 53 other brands. This time, the toxin killed 25
dogs. Although it caused many dogs to vomit, stop eating, and have diarrhea,
vomitoxin is a milder toxin than most. The more dangerous mycotoxins can cause
weight loss, liver damage, lameness, and even death as in the Doane case.
The Nature's Recipe incident
prompted the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to intervene. Dina Butcher,
Agriculture Policy Advisor for North Dakota Governor Ed Schafer, concluded that
the discovery of vomitoxin in Nature's Recipe wasn't much of a threat to the
human population because "the grain that would go into pet food is not a high
quality grain." Soy is another common ingredient that is sometimes used as a
protein and energy source in pet food. Manufacturers also use it to add bulk so
that when an animal eats a product containing soy he will feel more satisfied.
While soy has been linked to gas in some dogs, other dogs do quite well with
it.
Copyright © 1997-2002 Animal Protection Institute.
A Letter From Lynn
Johnson in Denver
Thanks for your article on dog food. I've
forwarded the link to my dog-owning friends, many of whom buy into the "vet
recommended" Science Diet, which is as good as feeding your dog sawdust. I have
a 6 year old golden retriever who has terrible allergies (and the behavioral
issues that can come with it) due to eating crappy food for the first 2 years
of his life. I'm sure you can imagine what we've been through with
him--prednisone, elimination diets of brown rice and pinto beans for months,
extreme hyperactivity, chronic yeast infections in his ears, hot spots,
constant itchiness. He now eats Wellness Supermix duck & sweet potatoe,
which doesn't contain BHT, etc., and he hasn't had a reaction since we
switched. Duck is the only protein he's never reacted to, otherwise we'd feed
him a whole-food diet. This food is the almost-next-best thing that's within
our budget. When a friend complains about how expensive this or any
high-quality brand is (we pay about $75/month to feed Sunny), I remind them
that paying for cancer treatment, allergy diagnosis, medication etc. costs a
hell of a lot more. Also, I wanted to share that my parents' cat Rascal lived
to be almost 25. He was an indoor/outdoor cat, and he ate more mice and birds
than anything else. (bad for the bird population). I know that his wildlife
diet is what kept him going for a quarter of a century. Too bad they don't make
mice & miller moth cat food ... that would keep our companions alive for at
least half of our lives! Keep up the interesting site.
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