Chances are that you have at least once stumbled upon a website or advertisement proclaiming that your pet's commercial dog food is wholly inadequate, or worse, killing your dog. These internet smear campaigns started shortly after the dog food recall scare in 2005 due to Aflotoxins in a variety of pet foods. Aflotoxins are produced by a fungus, and in this case the fungus was growing on a bad batch of corn, which unfortunately was used in a shipment of pet food.
The effect of noncompliance with the customary internal quality control along with tests procedures of a certain company, not to be named for purposes of confidentiality, was having 100 dogs and a cat sick and dead. Because of this, improvement in quality control measures was done by that company along with the other companies.
Safer and healthier supply of our pet's chow has been the consequence. Compared to dogs a decade ago, dogs today do live much longer, a great difference which can be accredited to huge advancements in animal nutrition. And due to longer lives of dogs, new pets to be adopted became infrequent, a not so illustrious reason for the congestion of animal shelters.
Critics will argue that if the food is so nutritious, then why do they have to spray it after processing to give it more nutritional value?
Since micronutrients such as Vitamin A for instance should be added together uniformly in the food in precise and small quantity, that is why spraying is done. Nutritional balance must be accomplished by making certain that every micronutrient needed is evenly distributed all throughout.
For those dog food brands being sold within the state, an ambiguity in the regulation of these exist, unfortunately causing a smudge to the market of dog food. Having to be sold within the bounds of the state, pet food products manufacturer will not have his goods regulated much as compared to those sold across.
No company will ever gain from murdering the pets of their clients. Having your pets to live for decades is the company's goal for consistent sales on their goods. It may not be so good to hear, but it is for real. It is a great driving force in the speedy progress in animal nutrition today. Thus, there exists no "plot in dog food".
Roselah Varde is a skilled professional writer who writes articles about dog food. She has been writing contents for sites such as this to share her expertise in dog food with others.




