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                                 FELINE NUTRITION
                                 R. Roger Breton
                                  Nancy J Creek
  1. —————————–
                                   Basic Needs
      Above all it is important to remember that your cat is a carnivore and
      requires a meat diet.  This apparently self-obvious fact is all too
      often overlooked by people who, all well meaning, attempt to make an
      omnivore or herbivore out of their pet.  They are slowly killing the
      animal with love.
      Dogs, while carnivores in the strictest sense, are omnivorous to a
      large degree, and have the ability to break down and digest vegetable
      as well as animal protein.  A dog can survive quite successfully on
      the same foods humans eat, hence can live on table scraps, or even a
      carefully balanced vegetarian diet, especially if supplements are
      used.
      Cats, despite 5000 years of domestication, remain strictly
      carnivorous.  They are incapable of digesting and receiving nutrition
      from the majority of vegetable proteins.  There are no and can be no
      vegetarian cats.  In addition, cats in the wild are equal-opportunity
      carnivores and devour the whole of their prey:  muscles, organs,
      viscera, bones, offal, skin, etc.  In this manner, cats ingest not
      only the flesh and organs of their prey but also the partially and
      wholly digested vegetable foods the prey had eaten.  With the assist-
      ance of the prey's own digestive processes, the cat then is able to
      derive nutrition from various vegetable sources.
      This evolved approach to eating means that the cat has lost the
      ability to manufacture various vitamins, enzymes and other substances
      necessary to life, receiving these substances directly from its food.
      This "laziness" has caused the nutritional requirements of the cat to
      be radically different from that of the dog, which in turn has caused
      cat food to be considerably more expensive than dog food.
                                   Food as Fuel
      Food is fuel.  The object of food is first and foremost to provide the
      body with the energy it needs to keep functioning.  The greater
      portion of this energy is utilized to keep the body functioning as a
      machine.  All processes in the body, movement, digestion, breathing,
      circulating blood, even thinking, require energy, all of which must be
      derived from the food consumed.  This energy is measured in calories.
      To a scientist, a calorie is a unit of thermal energy:  specifically,
      the amount of thermal energy necessary to raise the temperature of one
      cubic centimeter of water one degree Celsius.  This is a distinct and
      definite amount.
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      To a dietitian, a "calorie" is a unit of the potential thermal energy
      of a foodstuff:  specifically, the amount of potential thermal energy
      that would raise the temperature of one liter of water one degree
      Celsius.  Since one liter is equivalent to 1000 cubic centimeters, the
      dietitian's "calorie" is the scientist's "kilocalorie" (the prefix
      "kilo" means 1000).  Dietitian's calories are sometimes called "big
      calories" to differentiate them from the scientist's "true calories"
      or "small calories."  To us, they will simply be "calories."
                              The Exchange of Energy
      Energy is derived from food and used by the body via a series of
      chemical reactions.  All chemical reactions require the input of
      energy to trigger and control them.  No input of energy, no reactions.
      Some chemical reactions release more energy than was required to
      trigger and control them.  This surplus of energy is stored by the
      body in the form of chemicals such as proteins, fats, and
      carbohydrates, and is available for future use.  Other chemical
      reactions release less energy than was required to trigger and control
      them.  This energy deficiency must be made up from the body's energy
      reserves by breaking down the storage chemicals and releasing their
      energy.  The waste products of this breakdown are passed into the
      bloodstream and filtered out by the kidneys.
                                 Other Nutrients
      Besides basic energy in the form of calories, it is the task of food
      to provide all essential nutrients, the chemicals necessary for life.
      The vast majority of those chemicals required for life are derived by
      breaking down and rearranging the molecular structures of the
      proteins, fats, and carbohydrates in the foods consumed.  This process
      is known as synthesis, and is technically defined as the forming or
      building of a more complex compound from elements or simpler
      compounds.
      It is important to note that virtually all organic molecules are
      synthesized.  A glucose molecule synthesized by a cat is identical to
      one synthesized by an apple tree and is identical to one synthesized
      by a chemical laboratory.  All molecules of a given type are
      identical:  advertising claims aside, there is absolutely no
      difference between "natural" vitamin C and "synthetic" vitamin C.
      They are identical, and the terms "natural" and "synthetic" in this
      context are null words, without meaning.
      Like most higher organisms, the cat has lost the ability to synthesize
      some of the chemicals it requires for life, obtaining those chemicals
      ready-made from the food it eats.  Obviously, those chemicals must be
      present in the food, or the cat will fall ill and eventually die.  In
      humans, for example, a lack of the chemical ascorbic acid, vitamin C,
      will result in the condition known as scurvy.
                                     Protein
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      The primary source of food energy is protein.  Like all animals, a
      cat's body is primarily protein, and vast amounts of food protein are
      required to maintain it.  Typically, the energy content of a cat's
      diet should be derived at least 25 to 30 per cent from protein, almost
      all of which must be animal protein.  The major sources of animal
      protein in commercial foods are meat, fish, eggs, and dairy products.
      Vegetable protein is typically obtained from beans and peas, nuts, and
      cereals.
      Proteins, while providing the basic amino acids for muscle and organ
      tissue, do contain a high percentage of waste, which must be purged
      from the cat's system by the kidneys.  An all-protein diet, such as a
      raw meat diet, will not only lack other important and even critical
      nutrients, but will overtax the kidneys, and may lead to urinary
      problems or premature renal failure.
                                       Fats
      The secondary source of food energy is fats.  Fats have received much
      unwarranted bad press, mostly due to the public's preoccupation with
      being slim and total misunderstanding of what constitutes a good,
      well-balanced diet.  This preoccupation and misunderstanding are both
      vigorously perpetuated by the advertising industry (the same people
      who define a Twinkie (R) as "wholesome," and who define "wholesome" as
      "not causing death within 48 hours").  While this tendency is bad
      enough for our own collective health, it can be disastrous when the
      same philosophies are applied to our cats.  We at least have some
      choice in the matter.
      The cat requires a diet containing a lot of fat, far more than either
      the human or the dog.  From 15 to 40 per cent of the energy content of
      your cat's diet should be derived from fat.
      Unlike proteins, fat is little wasted by the cat's metabolism, and
      hence does not provide a burden to the kidneys.  Because of this, as a
      cat reaches old age, the fat content of its diet should be increased
      somewhat while the protein content is decreased proportionately.  In
      this manner, the proper overall energy content may be maintained while
      easing the burden on the older kidneys.  The key here is moderation in
      both rate and amount of dietary change.  Sudden or rapid changes in
      diet are especially hard on an older cat, while an all-fat diet is as
      bad as a no-fat diet.
                                  Carbohydrates
      The tertiary source of food energy is carbohydrates, primarily
      starches and sugars.  Like fats, carbohydrates too have received
      unwarranted bad press.  Neither we nor our cats can live without
      carbohydrates:  they are as essential to life as water.
      Only a small amount of carbohydrates is required in the cat's diet,
      with only about 5 percent of the total food energy being in this form.
      The simple carbohydrates, the sugars, are more easily assimilated into
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      the cat's system, while the complex carbohydrates, the starches, pass
      through virtually untouched.  Cooking complex carbohydrates such as
      potatoes, corn, pasta, etc., start the conversion from starch to sugar
      and aid in the digestion process.
                                      Fiber
      Vegetable matter provides another important function besides energy
      content:  it helps to keep the bowel functioning smoothly through the
      mildly abrasive and water-absorbing actions of its cellulose content,
      commonly referred to as "fiber."  Note that two seemingly opposite
      conditions may arise from a lack of fiber:  constipation, from a lack
      of abrasive action, or diarrhea, from a lack of water-absorbing
      action.  While fiber is not a nutrient per se, a "regular" cat needs
      some fiber in his diet.
      As with so many other things, fiber requirements and types have been
      completely distorted almost beyond recognition by the advertising
      industry.  Fiber is simply cellulose, which is the basic material from
      which the cellular walls (membranes) of plants are made.  Cellulose is
      cellulose, regardless of it's source, be it from oat bran or grass.
      In the wild, a cat derives all the cellulose it requires from the
      stomach and intestines of its prey.  The pampered cat, too, should
      receive all the cellulose it needs from its normal diet.
      As an interesting aside, many of the smaller wild cats subsist chiefly
      on insects and insectivores (lizards, etc.).  At first glance, one
      would think that such cats would have insufficient cellulose and
      carbohydrates in their diet.  This is not the case, as insects and
      other arthropods are exoskeletal creatures with a covering of chitin,
      a polysaccaride compound consisting of a simple cellulose-like base
      molecule (chitin and cellulose are chemically related) coupled with
      various simple sugars, thus providing both fiber and carbohydrates
      simultaneously.  Good things, those bugs!
                                     Vitamins
      Vitamins and related compounds are complex organic molecules used as
      catalysts or agents in various metabolic processes.  In the wild, the
      cat derives all the vitamins it requires from its prey and from
      sunlight.  The domestic cat must receive all its vitamins in its diet.
      Under some conditions, your veterinarian may prescribe a vitamin
      supplement.
      A warning is in order here.  If the diet is properly balanced and the
      cat is young and healthy, vitamin supplements are unnecessary.  Giving
      vitamin supplements to a healthy cat may actually lead to a condition
      of vitamin toxicity, which can be very dangerous, even deadly.  In a
      like manner, a vitamin deficiency can also be very serious.  The best
      solution is a well-balanced diet without supplements unless prescribed
      by a veterinarian.
      Each vitamin plays its role in the health of a cat.  Vitamin A is
      fundamental to good vision, proper growth, and a healthy skin.
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      Vitamin B1 is needed for growth and overall body function.  Vitamin C
      is important for a healthy skin, coat, and gums, but is not required
      in the diet as the cat synthesizes all it needs.  Only very small
      amounts of vitamin D are required for regulating the use of calcium
      and phosphorus, necessary for good bones and teeth.  Vitamin E is
      required for a healthy skeleton and reproductive system.  Vitamin K is
      required for proper blood clotting, but like vitamin C is wholly
      synthesized by the cat.  Vitamin B12 is not required by the cat except
      in very small traces.
                                     Minerals
      In addition to the proteins, fats, carbohydrates, fiber, and vitamins,
      all of which are complex organic molecules, certain small amounts of
      various inorganic substances are required for life.  Life is often
      though of as being composed of six elements:  carbon, hydrogen,
      oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorous; the same elements that make
      up DNA.  The "big six" are the overwhelming components of life, com-
      prising all but a fraction of a percent of all living tissue.  That
      fraction of a percent is crucial.
      The elements iron, sodium, iodine, magnesium, potassium, manganese,
      and a host of others are also required in varying amounts.  All these
      inorganic substances are lumped together under the general term
      "minerals."
      Again, atoms are atoms, and there is no such thing as "organic
      calcium," advertising claims notwithstanding.  The calcium extracted
      from limestone is identical to the calcium extracted from seashells or
      bone.  Limestone was once seashells, after all.  By the same token,
      calcium is an element, as are iron, sodium, iodine, etc., and cannot
      be artificially produced.  All elements, with the exception of a few
      short-lived and highly radioactive ones such as plutonium, are found
      only in nature (the short-lived ones are also found in nature, but not
      on Earth).
      Like the vitamins, the minerals are necessary for overall body
      function.  The three most important minerals are iron, calcium, and
      phosphorus.  Iron is crucial to proper blood function:  it is the
      "heme" in hemoglobin, which carries oxygen from the lungs throughout
      the body (making the blood red as it does so).  Calcium and phosphorus
      are required by the bones and teeth, which together contain over 99
      per cent of the body's calcium and phosphorus, and for proper muscle
      action.
                              Unclassified Nutrients
      Like everything else, there are a few nutrients that do not fall
      neatly into the major groups:  proteins, fats, carbohydrates,
      vitamins, and minerals.  These nutrients are nonetheless essential to
      life.  One such nutrient is linoleic acid, a fatty acid midway between
      the fats and the carbohydrates in chemical composition, which is
      necessary for healthy skin and fur, among other things.  There are
      many such unclassified but required nutrients.
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                           Cat-Peculiar Nutrient Needs
      It is important to remember the at cat is a cat, it is not and is
      never a dog, or a human, or any other living creature.  Cats are
      unique, and have unique needs.  Just as a cat needs little or none of
      some of the nutrients required by us, such as vitamin B12, it has a
      definite need for others that we do not, as well as differing
      proportions of those nutrients we have in common.
      Inositol, one of the B-complex vitamins, for example, is definitely
      required by the cat to be present in its diet, but is synthesized by
      dogs and humans.
      In a similar manner the compound taurine is required for good vision
      in certain nocturnal animals, such as cats.  It is believed to be
      required for a healthy tapetum lucidum, a lining inside the eye that
      acts as a sort of "light-amplifier," greatly increasing night vision
      and, incidentally, making the eyes very reflective.
      The metabolism of a cat is vastly different from dogs and humans in
      its ability to purge various chemicals from the system.  It is this
      metabolic difference that causes cats to be easily poisoned by things
      that a dog or human would shrug off.  Common aspirin metabolizes (is
      broken down and purged) in a human in about four to six hours, but
      requires 38 hours in a cat!  This difference makes the cat highly
      susceptible to salicylate toxicity.
      An overabundance of certain nutrients or substances, or a deficiency
      thereof, can and often does lead to various medical conditions and
      problems.
                                      Water
      People don't often think of water as a part of the diet, but without
      water there is no life.  About 70 per cent of a cat's body is water.
      A cat requires about one fluid ounce of water per pound of body weight
      per day.  In the wild, the majority of this water comes from the cat's
      prey.  In the home, this may also be true if the diet consists of
      canned food, but with semi-moist or dry foods this is not the case.
      Fresh water must always be available to your cat, regardless of its
      diet.
      Do not substitute milk or other liquids for water.  To a cat, milk is
      a food, not a beverage.  The only cat beverage is water.
      Many people are distressed when their cat will drink from a scummy
      puddle, the gutter, a pond, even the toilet, but won't touch its nice,
      clean water dish.  There is a simple cause for this behavior:  the
      water dish tastes bad to the cat, or used to taste bad (cats have good
      memories).  If we think in cat terms for a moment, algae, mud, fish-
      bits, even feces are all natural, normal things it rather expects in
      the wild.  But chlorine!  Feh!  Remember that your cat has a sensitive
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      sense of smell and taste (plus another sense midway between the two)
      and can readily detect odors and flavors lost on us, while even we can
      taste the chlorine in our tap water.  This foul taste is what makes
      the sale of bottled water profitable.
      You may find that your cat will also appreciate bottled water.
      Barring that, you may try boiling your pet's water first, as boiling
      will drive out the highly-volatile chlorine.  Even letting it stand
      out a few hours before serving will allow the majority of the chlorine
      to evaporate.  Often, adding an ounce of club soda (carbonated water)
      to 16 ounces of ordinary water will do the trick.  Cats love car-
      bonation.
                                 The Natural Diet
      There is always controversy as to what establishes an ideal diet.
      Putting aside such controversies, at least for the moment, we may
      safely say that an ideal diet would be one which meets all the evolved
      criteria of the cat.  In other words, a wild diet:  whole mouse,
      sparrow, cricket, lizard, etc.  It is unlikely that Purina or anyone
      else will be producing canned chopped whole mouse in the near future
      (the government would probably prohibit sale because of excessive
      mouse hairs), so we must look to actual wild cats and actual wild prey
      for the ideal diet.
      The actual long-term diet of a wild or feral domestic cat breaks down
      as follows:
                         Total     Dry        Fuel   Energy
          -------------------------------------------------
          Water          70.0%     -----     -----    -----
          Protein        14.0%     46.7%     50.0%    35.7%
          Fats            9.0%     30.0%     32.1%    51.5%
          Carbohydrates   5.0%     16.7%     17.9%    12.8%
          Ash             1.0%      3.3%     -----    -----
          Calcium         0.6%      2.0%     -----    -----
          Other           0.4%      1.3%     -----    -----
      The "total" column indicates the percentage breakdown of the diet with
      water included among the nutrients, while the "dry" column indicates
      the percentage breakdown excluding water.
      The "fuel" column indicates the percentage relationship of the fuel
      foods to each other:  protein, fats, and carbohydrates.
      The "energy" column indicates the percentage of total food energy
      (caloric) intake among the three fuel foods.  Note that while fats
      account for only 9% of the total diet, 30.0% of the dry diet, and
      32.1% of the fuel diet, they account for 51.5% of the total energy
      input.  This is because fats contain 9 calories per gram, while
      protein and carbohydrates each contain 4 calories per gram.
                             The Natural Kitten Diet
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      The natural diet for a kitten is its mother's milk.  Cat's milk is
      radically different than that of most other mammals, especially cows.
      The basic components of cat's milk per deciliter, compared against an
      equivalent adult cat diet, dog's milk, cow's milk, and 20% liquid
      reconstituted evaporated cow's milk (canned milk) is as follows:
                        Adult    Cat    Dog    Cow  Canned
                         Diet   Milk   Milk   Milk   Milk
          -----------------------------------------------
          Water          70%    72%    77%    87%    80%
          Solids         30%    28%    23%    13%    20%
          -----------------------------------------------
          Calories      187.2  147.9  119.5   68.7  115.4
          Protein        16.8   11.4    7.5    3.5    5.8
          Fats           11.6    7.9    8.3    3.9    6.6
          Carbohydrates   3.9    7.8    3.7    4.9    8.2
      Calories are per deciliter of milk or equivalent adult diet.  Protein,
      fats, and carbohydrates are in grams per deciliter (one deciliter is
      1/10 of a liter or 100 milliliters:  about 3.38 fluid ounces).  The
      carbohydrate content of milk is virtually all lactose, commonly called
      milk sugar.
                               Special Requirements
      Some cats require special dietary consideration.  The obvious would be
      kittens, pregnant and nursing queens, elder statescats, and
      convalescent cats.  If your cat is or has been ill, you should follow
      the dietary guidelines prescribed by your veterinarian.  Normal cat
      conditions should require only normal dietary variations.
      There is a strong tendency these days for people to follow the advice
      of others in the matter of diet, even the very strangest of diets have
      their adherents.  This is not always wise, even for humans.  When it
      comes to our cats, one rule is very simple:  unless the advice giver
      is well-schooled in veterinary medicine and/or feline nutrition, take
      all such advice (especially if radical) with great hesitation.
      Remember that some components of food are critical but not obvious,
      and that more is not always better. When in the least doubt concerning
      a new cat diet, ask your vet.
      The normal diet of any mammal changes with age.  Obviously, a nursing
      kitten requires milk, whereas an older cat does not:  the myth of cats
      and milk is just that, some older cats will in fact become ill if they
      drink milk.
      Less obvious is the fact that the total caloric intake per pound of
      body weight and the ratio of protein to fat in the diet changes with
      age and other conditions.  Following is a simple table giving
      requirements versus age and condition:
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                        Cals  Protein   Fats   Carbs
          ------------------------------------------
          Newborn        190   42.1%   29.2%   28.8%
          5 weeks        125   47.2%   27.5%   25.3%
          10 weeks       100   50.0%   26.1%   23.9%
          20 weeks        65   51.9%   30.0%   18.1%
          6 months        50   51.3%   33.3%   15.4%
          1-10 years      40   52.0%   35.9%   12.1%
          15 years        35   44.0%   42.0%   14.0%
          20 years        35   43.3%   41.5%   15.2%
          Pregnant       125   45.7%   31.8%   22.5%
          Nursing        125   44.9%   31.1%   24.0%
                                Daily Requirements
      A good many of us humans are counting calories, the same may be done
      for a cat.  A healthy adult cat requires approximately 40 calories per
      pound of body weight per day (for an 8-pound cat this would be 320
      calories per day).  Of these 40 calories, about 12-16 should come from
      protein, 20-25 from fat, and 3-4 from carbohydrates.
          Protein             3600    mg -- 14 calories
          Fat                 2500    mg -- 23 calories
          Carbohydrate         840    mg -- 3.3 calories
          Linolic Acid         250    mg
          ----------------------------------------------
          Vitamin A            250    I.U.
          Vitamin D             13    I.U.
          Vitamin E             10    I.U.
          Choline               25    mg
          Niacin (B3)          560    ug
          Pantothenic Acid     130    ug
          Riboflavin (B2)       63    ug
          Pyridoxine (B6)       50    ug
          Folic Acid (B9)       13    ug
          Thiamin (B1)           7.8  ug
          Biotin                 0.63 ug
          Vitamin B12            0.25 ug
          Vitamin C              *    trace only
          Vitamin K              *    trace only
          ----------------------------------------------
          Calcium              125    mg
          Phosphorus           100    mg
          Potassium             38    mg
          Sodium Cloride        25    mg
          Magnesium              2.5  mg
          Iron                   1.3  mg
          Zinc                 380    ug
          Manganese            130    ug
          Copper                63    ug
          Cobalt                25    ug
          Iodine                13    ug
          Selenium               1.3  ug
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      There are, of course, many other subtle and necessary components of
      food that are not obvious in these tables.
                                 Commercial Foods
      The vast majority of us will be feeding our cats commercial cat foods.
      These foods come in four specific types:  dry foods, soft-moist foods,
      balanced canned foods, and specialty or "gourmet" canned foods.  As a
      simple rule of thumb, the nutritional content of 3 ounces (one level
      cup) of dry food is the same as that of 4 ounces of soft-moist food
      and the same as that of 7.5 ounces of canned food.
      Specialty or gourmet foods are seldom a balanced diet by themselves,
      and must not be fed without supplements or another, balanced food.
      They are best used as treats or "Sunday dinner."
      The scientifically-balanced foods available through pet and feed
      stores and from your veterinarian usually contain supplements and
      additives to guarantee the best nutritional balance possible.  Most of
      these foods are further classed into pediatric/nursing, maintenance,
      and geriatric blends, assuring a proper protein-fats-carbohydrate mix
      for the specific cat.  Specialized diets (weight loss, low sodium,
      etc.) are also available from these same sources and through your
      veterinarian for the problem cat.
      Commercial supermarket-type cat foods vary little in nutritional
      content between brands.  Assuming the food is complete in nutrition
      and the cat is a young-to-middle-aged healthy adult, almost any of
      these foods will suffice.
      One should be wary of non-nutritional additives and fillers used in
      commercial foods.  Most dry foods, for example, use corn meal as a
      bulk filler, while canned foods often use gelatin.  Since these
      substances effectively pass right on through a cat, there is no harm
      in them, but you are paying for them, sometimes dearly.  As with
      everything else, read those labels.
      Several popular brands of catfood use excessive food coloring to
      enhance the appearance of the food.  One extremely popular brand uses
      so much red dye that it will make your cat's stools orange.  The claim
      is that the dye is FDA approved and does the cat no harm.  Frankly, we
      feel that the color of the food is of no interest to the cat (texture,
      shape, taste, and smell are different matters).  It is put there
      solely for the benefit of the cat owner (who is the purchaser, after
      all) to make the food appear more like meat.  Who needs it!  If the
      food is good and appeals to the cat, what else matters?
      A common misconception about cat foods is that dry foods derive their
      protein from cereals and other vegetable sources while canned foods
      derive their protein from meat and other animal sources.  In reality,
      all commercial cat foods derive their protein from both animal and
      vegetable sources, with animal sources dominating.  Most vegetable
      products in commercial foods, however, may be considered as filler.
      Please remember that in the wild the cat does consume vegetable
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      protein in the stomach and viscera of its prey, and can utilize this
      protein with the assistance of its prey's own digestive processes.
      These processes are in part duplicated during the manufacture of
      commercial cat food allowing digestion of some vegetable proteins.
      Unfortunately, an understanding of the molecular structure of proteins
      and the digestive process itself is required to produce the
      "partially-digested" vegetable protein used in cat foods, thus making
      it virtually impossible for home-kitchen duplication.  There are still
      no vegetarian cats!
                                    Dry Foods
      Dry foods  are the least expensive of the four types and, being dry,
      have the added advantage of an abrasive action which helps to keep the
      teeth and gums clean and healthy and minimize the buildup of dental
      tartar.  They derive their protein and fat from meat, fish, poultry,
      and/or dairy products blended into a cereal base, usually corn meal.
      Careful balancing and the addition of vitamin and mineral supplements
      have made the modern dry food a good and well-balanced diet.
      These foods are typically about 10% water (no matter how dry they
      appear), and thus have long shelf and bowl lives.  This means the food
      may be left out at all times and the cat may help himself to many
      small meals rather than one or two large meals.  This improves tone
      and digestion.
      One theoretical disadvantage is a predisposition among male cats,
      especially neuters, to develop Feline Urological Syndrome (FUS).  This
      predisposition has not been substantiated at this time (neither has it
      been disproved) and veterinarians are sharply divided on the issue.
      If such a predisposition exists, it would probably be due to the low
      water content of the dry foods.  Providing an adequate source of good-
      tasting fresh water will often negate any such problem.
      Dry foods tend to lose their nutrition slowly over time, especially
      upon exposure to air and light.  Avoid using any dry food more than
      six months old.  If dry food must be stored for long periods (as on
      board ship), store the food in air- and light-tight containers.
                                 Soft-Moist Foods
      Soft-moist foods have more appeal than dry foods, also more cost.
      They are intentionally designed to make the cat think they are meat,
      both in texture and taste, and do a fairly good job of it.
      Like dry foods, they derive their protein and fat from a variety of
      sources.  Additionally, one particular source, meat, fish, whatever,
      is often emphasized to establish flavor.  They run to about 30-35%
      water, as contrasted to dry food's 10% and canned food's 70%.  Unlike
      dry foods, they do not inhibit dental tartar.
      They also have the advantages of minimal odor and long shelf life.
      They are good for about a day in the bowl, and should not be left out
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      longer than that.  Shelf life is extremely long, as they are usually
      packaged in air-tight pouches.
      Be aware that most soft-moist foods contain an abundance of
      preservatives to prevent spoilage, so labels should be read carefully.
                                   Canned Foods
      Canned foods are the most expensive of the three types, but are still
      the most popular.  Their biggest drawbacks being cost and odor.
      Canned foods are primarily protein and fats from meat, fish, dairy and
      vegetable sources with added vitamins and minerals.  Except for the
      specialty or gourmet varieties, most are nutritionally complete.
      Many canned foods contain 70% water or more, often gelatin is used as
      a filler and literally to trap and hold more water (one brand is 78%
      water).  The purchaser pays for this water and gelatin, naturally.
      Read those labels!
      Unlike the dry foods but like the soft-moist foods, canned foods do
      nothing to inhibit dental tartar.  However, the same argument that
      gives dry foods a predisposition towards the development of FUS
      implies a lack of predisposition in canned foods.  Again, this has not
      yet been determined one way or the other.
      If a cat has already suffered a bout with FUS, especially repeated
      bouts, a low magnesium canned-food diet is often prescribed as the
      preventative of choice.  We wish to emphasize here that the low
      magnesium canned-food diet is for animals who already have an FUS
      history, and is not indicated in healthy animals.
                                  Gourmet Foods
      Premium or gourmet foods are usually not balanced and must not be used
      as the basis of your cat's diet.  Think of them as treat foods.
      These foods have two distinguishing characteristics.  First, they are
      terribly expensive, and second, the tend to be of the "100% beef"
      variety, all one substance.
      The higher price does not necessarily mean better.  Using 100% beef as
      an example, the food may contain lung and udder, which have no real
      nutritional value but are still beef, and most certainly will contain
      hoof, also still beef, in the form of gelatin, also of minimal
      nutritional value.  What we're saying here is that if it's part of a
      cow it's "beef," but some "beef" is really bull.
      With gourmet foods, if you don't mind the price and your cat likes
      them, use them as treats.
                                   Fresh Foods
      We in the U.S. have been almost totally brainwashed into the concept
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      the "fresh is best."  This holds true if and only if fresh is
      balanced, which it often is not.
      A well-balanced fresh-food diet for a cat would consist of meat
      (muscle tissue) for protein; saturated and unsaturated fats for
      protein (polyunsaturated fats, such as those in margarine, are not
      usually found in a carnivore's diet); sugars, starches, and other
      carbohydrates; cereals, grass, and certain leafy vegetables for fiber;
      various organs for vitamin content; bones for calcium and phosphorous;
      blood and vegetables for iron and mineral content; and small amounts
      of this and that for trace elements and pleasure.  All these
      requirements are contained in the average mouse.
      Since few of us will raise mice specifically for cat food, we may feed
      our pets a varied and well-balanced fresh-food diet with a little
      thought.  The following foods have the characteristics and effects
      listed:
      Meat (muscle tissue):  this is the basic food of any carnivore.  The
          meat may be beef, horse, pork, lamb, chicken, whatever (even
          mouse).  Most meats should be lightly cooked to kill parasites,
          especially pork and fresh-water fish.  The cheaper, fatty cuts of
          meat will also provide the fat the cat requires (buy the cheap
          hamburger, it's better for the cat).
          As a special treat, try giving your cat a mouse-sized gobbet of
          almost-raw body-temperature rabbit or chicken when he is not
          especially hungry and watch the hunter come out.  He will probably
          stalk it, throw it in the air, pounce on it, and eventually eat
          it.  This is all part of the natural order of life.
      Liver:  cats have a weakness for liver.  This is an evolved trait to
          guarantee that the liver of the prey will be eaten and the cat
          will obtain sufficient vitamin A and iron.  In the home, the cat
          will take all the liver it can get.  If too much liver is given,
          the cat will succumb to vitamin-A toxicity, which can be fatal.
          As in all things, moderation is the key.
          The liver (especially beef liver) should be very lightly cooked.
          When eaten raw it often causes diarrhea, when overcooked,
          constipation.
      Kidneys:  usually quite inexpensive, kidneys (especially beef kidneys)
          provide a good source of iron and several critical vitamins.
          Because the uric acid content is high, kidneys should be soaked in
          cold water for a hour or two prior to cooking and serving.
      Heart:  heart in general but especially poultry and rabbit hearts are
          a favorite among cats and provide top-notch protein.  Do not
          remove the fatty tissue and paracardial sack, as they provide a
          source of needed fats.
      Lung:  lung has little food value and should not be served.  Most cats
          won't eat lung by itself.
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      Udder:  like lung, udder has little food value and should not be
          served.
      Spleen:  spleen will often cause diarrhea and should be avoided.
      Tripe:  fine for dogs and large cats, tripe is usually too tough for
          our small cats.  Tripe stew, on the other hand, is excellent, as
          the meat is softened by stewing and the broth is good all around.
      Offal:  the offal of small animals, such as rabbits, is fine if cooked
          lightly to kill parasites.  It is, after all, what they eat in the
          wild.
      Bones:  bones are good food.  The bones of larger animals, such as
          beef bones, are usually too big for a cat to get a handle on, but
          a cartilagineous knuckle or tail bone may be just the ticket.  The
          bones of small animals may be served lightly cooked to kill
          parasites, but do not serve the cooked bones of birds, especially
          the long bones, as cooking makes the bones brittle and they may
          shatter and become lodged in the throat or puncture the esophagus
          or stomach wall.
          Bones of any size may be pressure-cooked until soft, but this
          destroys the marrow, which the cat considers the best part.  Bone
          meal may be used to provide needed calcium and phosphorous.
      Fish:  cooked, boned fish is almost always welcome.  Avoid raw fish in
          quantity as a vitamin-B toxicity may easily develop, especially
          with cod, tuna and other oily fish.  Do not feed fish organs,
          especially fish livers.
      Milk:  milk is a food, not a drink (the only cat drink is water).
          This food will provide an excellent source of calcium and
          phosphorus needed for strong bones and teeth, as well as many
          other vitamins and minerals.  Unfortunately, a large percentage of
          cats lose the ability to digest milk as they grow older.
          To test your cat for milk tolerance, give it a small bowl of milk,
          then watch its stools for the next six hours.  If diarrhea
          develops, the cat cannot digest milk, if the stool remains normal,
          it can.
          An acidopholus-enriched milk, available at most large
          supermarkets, can often be consumed by cats (or people) that
          cannot tolerate normal milk.  Acidopholus is the symbiotic
          bacterium that lives within the intestine and produces the enzyme
          that metabolizes lactose (milk sugar).  The most common cause of
          milk intolerance is an acidopholus deficiency.  Acidopholus-
          enriched milk carries its own acidopholus culture with it.
      Yogurt:  many cats like plain yogurt and, like milk, it is an
          excellent source of calcium and phosphorus.  Unlike milk, yogurt
          is one-step removed from fresh.  It has already been consumed by a
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          bacterium, and is therefore partially digested.  This makes it
          very easy for cats and people to finish digesting.  Being
          sensitive to terms like "digested," the dairy industry calls
          yogurt a "cultured" product.
      Butter:  an excellent source of fats, good for growth and coat, butter
          is a good but somewhat expensive treat upon which a cat will
          gladly pig out.  We suggest the occasional small pat as a special
          treat.
      Cream:  combining the tastes and benefits of butter and milk, sweet
          cream is kitty champagne!  Treat it as such.
      Cheese:  most cheeses will cause constipation if fed in large amounts.
          The occasional small piece is healthful and appreciated.  Cats
          don't seem to care much for the exotic cheeses, such as limburger,
          brie, or bleu, possible they are put off by the smell of the mold
          (we humans eat the damnedest things!).
      Margarine:  since most margarine taste pretty much like butter, cats
          will usually treat them like butter and take all they can get.
          Unfortunately, margarine is not butter, and does not contain the
          calcium and phosphorus that makes butter so beneficial to cats.
          The polyunsaturated vegetable fats used in most margarines go
          straight through a cat.  Think of margarine as a mild and good-
          tasting cat laxative (really a lubricant), and use a small pat of
          it as a loving treat/preventative/cure for hairballs and
          constipation.
      Eggs:  raw egg yolk is beneficial and tasty, providing protein,
          sulfur, calcium, phosphorus, and a host of other vitamins and
          minerals.  The raw egg white, on the other hand, contains avatin,
          which breaks down and destroys the B vitamins.
          If you must feed your cat whole eggs, cook them first, which
          congeals the white and destroys the avatin.
      Vegetables:  cats are carnivores, but they do eat the vegetable
          contents of their prey's stomach and viscera.  Small amounts of
          vegetable matter such as potato or pasta, about 5% of the total
          diet, can be consumed providing the vegetables have been cooked
          first (cooking breaks down complex carbohydrates into simple
          carbohydrates and aids digestion.  If you are feeding too much
          vegetable matter, or not cooking it enough, it will show up as
          constipation or diarrhea, depending upon the vegetable.
      Fruits:  unlike vegetables, fruits contain primarily simple
          carbohydrates and need not be cooked.  The author had a calico
          cat, Gigi, who loved melon:  watermelon, honeydew, cantaloupe --
          she loved them all!
          Like vegetables, be moderate and beware intestinal distress.
      Cereals:  many cats like cereals.  Again, in moderation, cereals such
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          as oatmeal, wheat farina, corn-meal mush, etc., are quite
          beneficial as providers of carbohydrates.  Avoid raw cereals, as
          cats cannot digest the starches.  Absolutely avoid grits (and
          hominy in general), as the residual lye is toxic to a cat.
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