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[personal profile] conuly
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles/petfood1.html

Tell me it's sponsored by PETA or something, because I'm not about to check.

Date: 2004-08-13 02:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moggymania.livejournal.com
The problem is twofold:

1) Euthanasia chemicals (as well as other chemicals such as those on flea collars which are left on the deceased animal) can't be broken down by the rendering process, *and* they aren't excreted. While it's a tiny amount per meal, this means that the chemicals build up in the animal's body over its lifetime and could be doing serious harm in the long run.

2) Cannibalism runs the risk of the outbreak of prion diseases -- the "Mad Cow" (BSE) outbreaks were caused directly by humans forcing animals to eat their own kind. Rendering animals doesn't destroy the prions, so regardless of the industry claiming that it's a safe practice (just as they did before the BSE epidemics) there is a chance of it becoming a major problem.

I've noticed a *huge* difference in all signs of health in my cats after switching away from the "grocery store" brands over to the good ones (no vomiting, almost no hairballs, good weight, shiny coats, much more energetic, happier, etc)... I see you mentioned elsewhere that you feed the same class of foods that I do, so you've likely seen similar results. :)

As for people being more responsible, there are other ways to handle the situation that are highly effective. An increasing number of cities rely primarily or entirely on "no-kill" shelters now: they spend funds on education, low-cost (or free) spay-and-neuter clinics, spay/neuter before adopting any animals out, mandated sterilization, and so forth. In some cities it's working so well that there are shortages of puppies/kittens -- the difficulty is mostly a matter of getting the city to make the initial investment, as the cost goes down sharply as the population comes under control. :-)

Date: 2004-08-13 02:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] catsluvdmb.livejournal.com
We have no kill shelters here in Raleigh (I volunteer for this one (http://www.safehavenforcats.org)), but the waiting list is so long that many animals end up at the Wake County shelter in the long run.

One program that I think is excellent, aside from education of pet owners, is to neuter feral animals, give them a 3 year rabies shot and re-release them. That way they're not being put down for being too wild and they're not breeding to worsen the problem.

Date: 2004-08-13 02:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moggymania.livejournal.com
Only shelter here in my city is also no-kill. :-) Our population is under control, though, so there's no overflow -- actually, they've had enough funds through donations and such that they were able to build a new deluxe shelter that's quite amazing. You can see bits of it in the kitty pics at the shelter site here:
http://www.petalumaanimalshelter.org/cats.html

I'm not sure if our shelter does TNR (trap/neuter/release) but I know that there are a *lot* of feral feline organizations in my county. Some do TNR, others focus on adoption.

I think that part of why things are working where I'm at is because there's a large amount of community involvement, plus a state law mandating all animals be spayed/neutered *before* being adopted out. Most of the independent pet supply stores donate floor space for the shelter to use as an adoptible kitty showcase, there's a community of "foster home" volunteers, plus all of the various rescue groups in the area, a volunteer-run website with updated pics and videos of pets up for adoption, and so forth.

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