
Dogs are meat
eaters and don't have the teeth or stomach to eat dog food with
corn which ferments and can cause bloat.
Why would any reasonable dog
owner feed a dog food that contains corn? There are many
reason not to but let's start with a dog's teeth, certainly not
made for grinding corn.
Tam Cordingley
©
TheDogPlace.org 2006
- Have you ever looked at the
teeth of a wolf? How about those magnificent teeth of the lions
we marvel at on National Geographic channel?
Have you ever noticed the teeth
of a cow, goat, or sheep? A predator’s teeth are not the same
as the teeth of a ruminant. Predators are carnivores. Simply
put that means they are designed to eat MEAT. Meat is highly
usable and easily digestible by carnivores (dogs, therefore
they have a short digestive tract and only one stomach. The
dog’s digestive system is not intended by nature to handle large
amounts of roughage.
Ruminants on the other hand
have multi-chambered stomachs to break down and digest grains
and forage crops. They swallow take this material, mix it with
digestive juices, spit it back into their mouths, chew their cud
again, and swallow it back into the next stomach. When a cow is
butchered the stomach contents in the first stomach are nothing
like the contents of the fourth chamber of the stomach.
The point is that it takes four stomach chambers to digest grains and
roughage and make it usable. The carnivore has only one
stomach.
Corn is a useful vegetable. It
is used to make corn meal, which sits on your stomach like a
heavy lump until passed. Sweet corn is great, with butter in
the summer, but did you ever notice it comes out the same way it
goes in? Corn is fermented to make ethanol and corn whiskey.
The fermentation process also
produces methane. Methane is a
useful gas, it can power all sorts of machinery. However the
process of fermentation, which produces gas, is also the process
that causes bloat in dogs.
When fermented, grains produce gas - or rye whisky or scotch,
etc. Meat may rot but it does not ferment.
I have one dog who is a
confirmed stool eater, however she is selective. She will
only eat the stool of a dog that was fed kibble. That
stool has undigested particles in it so is viewed by the body as
food. The stool of a dog that is fed meat will not be eaten because
all the food has been digested. This same principle applies to
rabbits. If not wire-caged, they will eat their stool once but
reject it the second time around, after the nutrients are used
up.
Why do dog food companies
use
primarily corn? That answer is easy. It is cheap and readily
available. It is not a coincidence that most dog food companies
are also cereal companies. On most labels there are three or
more different names for the corn, but it is mostly corn.
The end of this short story is
that I don’t feel that my dogs should be the disposal unit for
the cereal industry. If God intended for dogs to eat hay and
corn they would have teeth like cows and horses.
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