Study on meat in pet foods shows not all brands follow regulations
Oct 01, 2014
Study on meat in pet foods shows not all brands follow regulations
Researchers in Chapman University's Food Science Program have just published a study on pet food mislabeling. The study focused on commercial pet foods marketed for dogs and cats to identify meat species present as well as any instances of mislabeling. Of the 52 products tested, 31 were labeled correctly, 20 were potentially mislabeled, and one contained a non-specific meat ingredient that could not be verified.
"Although regulations exist for pet foods, increases in international trade and globalization of the food supply have amplified the potential for food fraud to occur," said Rosalee Hellberg, Ph.D., and co-author on the study. "With the recent discovery of horsemeat in ground meat products sold for human consumption in several European countries, finding horsemeat in U.S. consumer food and pet food products is a concern, which is one of the reasons we wanted to do this study."
Chicken was the most common meat species found in the pet food products. Pork was the second most common meat species detected, and beef, turkey and lamb followed, respectively. Goose was the least common meat species detected. None of the products tested positive for horsemeat.
Of the 20 potentially mislabeled products, 13 were dog food and 7 were cat food. Of these 20, 16 contained meat species that were not included on the product label, with pork being the most common undeclared meat species. In three of the cases of potential mislabeling, one or two meat species were substituted for other meat species.
In the study, DNA was extracted from each product and tested for the presence of eight meat species: beef, goat, lamb, chicken, goose, turkey, pork, and horse.
"Pet food safety was another area of concern, particularly with pet foods that are specifically formulated to address food allergies in both cats and dogs," continued Dr. Hellberg.
The pet food industry is a substantial market in the United States. Nearly 75 percent of U.S. households own pets, totaling about 218 million pets (not including fish). On average, each household spends $500 annually on their pets, equating to about 1 percent of household expenditures. In the past five years, pet industry expenditures have increased by $10 billion, with $21 billion spent on pet food alone in 2012.
The foods developed for pets are regulated by both federal and state entities. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Veterinary Medicine regulates animal feed and pet foods. While the U.S. Department of Agriculture regulates the interstate transportation and processing of animal products, as well as the inspection of animal product imports and exports.
While a seemingly high percentage of pet foods were found to be potentially mislabeled in this study, the manner in which mislabeling occurred is not clear; nor is it clear as to whether the mislabeling was accidental or intentional and at which points in the production chain it took place.
The study was published in the journal Food Control and was completed with Chapman undergrad student Tara Okuma.
THE LINK : http://phys.org/news/2014-10-meat-pet-foods-brands.html
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Is the Meat Listed on Your Bag actually the Meat Contained
Is the Meat Listed on Your Bag actually the Meat Contained
Doc E & HR UH MHR WR SR Black Forest Casey
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- Brazosvalleyvizslas
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Re: Is the Meat Listed on Your Bag actually the Meat Contained
Too many holes in that study for me but my main one would be, who cares if it was found to have some horsemeat in it. My dogs like horsemeat.
Re: Is the Meat Listed on Your Bag actually the Meat Contained
I think that a very interesting study. (I have a degree in psychology so have had to wade through many a study :roll: )
Pretty basic. You test the meat in the dog food bag ; is it what it says or not?
"Of the 20 potentially mislabelled products, 13 were dog food ... Of these 20, 16 contained meat species that were not included on the product label, with pork being the most common undeclared meat species. In three of the cases of potential mislabeling, one or two meat species were substituted for other meat species."
I find that pretty disconcerting.
Pretty basic. You test the meat in the dog food bag ; is it what it says or not?
"Of the 20 potentially mislabelled products, 13 were dog food ... Of these 20, 16 contained meat species that were not included on the product label, with pork being the most common undeclared meat species. In three of the cases of potential mislabeling, one or two meat species were substituted for other meat species."
I find that pretty disconcerting.
" We are more than our gender, skin color, class, sexuality or age; we are unlimited potential, and can not be defined by one label." quote A. Bartlett
Re: Is the Meat Listed on Your Bag actually the Meat Contained
If some paid as much attention to what they stick into their own kids mouths.
If only a company would come out with a horsemeat formula. Wilburs Best.
If only a company would come out with a horsemeat formula. Wilburs Best.
- Brazosvalleyvizslas
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Re: Is the Meat Listed on Your Bag actually the Meat Contained
52 were tested and 20 were" questionable"? They couldn't even identify the meat but I am supposed to trust this study? In only 1 case could they not identify the source. Sorry but it doesn't take a Phych degree to call BS.Doc E wrote:Study on meat in pet foods shows not all brands follow regulations
Oct 01, 2014
Study on meat in pet foods shows not all brands follow regulations
Researchers in Chapman University's Food Science Program have just published a study on pet food mislabeling. The study focused on commercial pet foods marketed for dogs and cats to identify meat species present as well as any instances of mislabeling. Of the 52 products tested, 31 were labeled correctly, 20 were potentially mislabeled, and one contained a non-specific meat ingredient that could not be verified.
"Although regulations exist for pet foods, increases in international trade and globalization of the food supply have amplified the potential for food fraud to occur," said Rosalee Hellberg, Ph.D., and co-author on the study. "With the recent discovery of horsemeat in ground meat products sold for human consumption in several European countries, finding horsemeat in U.S. consumer food and pet food products is a concern, which is one of the reasons we wanted to do this study."
Chicken was the most common meat species found in the pet food products. Pork was the second most common meat species detected, and beef, turkey and lamb followed, respectively. Goose was the least common meat species detected. None of the products tested positive for horsemeat.
Of the 20 potentially mislabeled products, 13 were dog food and 7 were cat food. Of these 20, 16 contained meat species that were not included on the product label, with pork being the most common undeclared meat species. In three of the cases of potential mislabeling, one or two meat species were substituted for other meat species.
In the study, DNA was extracted from each product and tested for the presence of eight meat species: beef, goat, lamb, chicken, goose, turkey, pork, and horse.
"Pet food safety was another area of concern, particularly with pet foods that are specifically formulated to address food allergies in both cats and dogs," continued Dr. Hellberg.
The pet food industry is a substantial market in the United States. Nearly 75 percent of U.S. households own pets, totaling about 218 million pets (not including fish). On average, each household spends $500 annually on their pets, equating to about 1 percent of household expenditures. In the past five years, pet industry expenditures have increased by $10 billion, with $21 billion spent on pet food alone in 2012.
The foods developed for pets are regulated by both federal and state entities. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Veterinary Medicine regulates animal feed and pet foods. While the U.S. Department of Agriculture regulates the interstate transportation and processing of animal products, as well as the inspection of animal product imports and exports.
While a seemingly high percentage of pet foods were found to be potentially mislabeled in this study, the manner in which mislabeling occurred is not clear; nor is it clear as to whether the mislabeling was accidental or intentional and at which points in the production chain it took place.
The study was published in the journal Food Control and was completed with Chapman undergrad student Tara Okuma.
THE LINK : http://phys.org/news/2014-10-meat-pet-foods-brands.html
.
Protein is Protein and dogs don't care where it comes from and they surely don't read studies.
Re: Is the Meat Listed on Your Bag actually the Meat Contained
And unless it is something really important, they probably didn't thoroughly clean the equipment between runs which easily could explain traces. As always some people are just looking for something wrong.
Ezzy
Ezzy
http://www.perfectpedigrees.com/4genview.php?id=144
http://www.perfectpedigrees.com/4genview.php?id=207
It's not how many breaths you have taken but how many times it has been taken away!
Has anyone noticed common sense isn't very common anymore.
http://www.perfectpedigrees.com/4genview.php?id=207
It's not how many breaths you have taken but how many times it has been taken away!
Has anyone noticed common sense isn't very common anymore.