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I used to hear that dogs can be given vegetarian dog food, but that cats need meat.

I'm not sure therefore how to interpret the following PETA claim about cats.

Vegetarian Cats and Dogs

If you have been feeding your companion animals commercial pet foods, you may be jeopardizing their health. [...]

Cats are often more finicky than dogs, and their nutritional requirements are more complicated. [...]

James Peden found vegetarian sources of both taurine and vitamin A, plus arachidonic acid, another essential feline nutrient. He then developed veterinarian-approved supplements Vegecat™ and Vegekit™ to add to his recipes. These recipes are probably the healthiest way to feed cats a vegan diet at this time.

What evidence is there for the healthiness of vegetarian cat food? Is it "more healthy" (for the cat), or "as healthy", or "less healthy" than a control (e.g. than some other commercial cat food[s]).

Also, according to this little page, vegetarian cat food seems complicated.

  • The cited Vegecat™ and Vegekit™ are "added to his recipes" rather than being pre-bought cat food

  • Later it suggests you add "digestive enzymes" to "cooked or processed food"

  • Later it says,

    If you decide to prepare your own vegetarian dog or cat food, we recommend that you read Vegetarian Cats & Dogs to ensure that you understand the nutritional needs of dogs and cats. Do not rely on this factsheet for complete information. The book has several recipes and helpful hints. If your library or bookstore doesn’t have it, you can order it from Harbingers of a New Age.

So can you actually even buy, does anyone make and sell commercially, a vegetarian cat-food? Or is this a realm of home-cooked experimentation?

I'm willing to consider answers/evidence which include almost any (non-strict) definition of "vegetarian": even including for example milk or shell-fish; but not meat and meat by-products.

ChrisW
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  • While I can't speak for the healthiness of vegetarian cat food, it's clear that it is commercially available. – Is Begot Oct 07 '14 at 14:58
  • I'm not sure how to ask this then. What I'd like to know is whether in theory it (vegetarian cat food) can be as good or better, and if so whether 'such' cat food is commercially available (and/or if it's possible to know whether a given commercially available cat food is 'such'). – ChrisW Oct 07 '14 at 15:16
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    As Geobits notes, vegetarian cat food is demonstrably available. As for whether it's as good as normal cat food, that question may be better suited for [pets.SE]. – Ilmari Karonen Oct 07 '14 at 19:44
  • Answer to question in title: Yes, but it's stupid. Look at a cat's teeth, they are not the teeth of a herbivore. They are the teeth of a carnivore. If the very first step in the animals digestive system is designed for meat you can bet that the rest of their digestive system is designed for... wait for it... MEAT! – Ryan Oct 08 '14 at 16:02
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    My mother told me a story about a woman who was vegan, and tried to only feed her dog home-cooked vegan meals. Long story short: the dog died. – DumpsterDoofus Oct 08 '14 at 17:55
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    I wouldn't rely on PETA as a reliable source of information, they're hardly what you would call objective or disinterested. – GordonM Oct 09 '14 at 12:26
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    @ryan We're designed to die, too. Domestic cats live longer than feral cats. I don't find "argument by design" convincing. – ChrisW Oct 09 '14 at 13:42
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    @DumpsterDoofus My mother told me a story of a dog that choked on a chicken bone. – ChrisW Oct 09 '14 at 13:43
  • @GordonM That's true, right? So it's better to double-check what they say, here, isn't it? – ChrisW Oct 09 '14 at 13:44
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    @GordonM: Combining the insights of both of our mothers, it seems logical to conclude that the optimal diet for a dog consists entirely of Slim-Jims. – DumpsterDoofus Oct 09 '14 at 14:30
  • @ChrisW, yep we are designed to die. What's your point? That's an evolutionary thing as well, make room for the young and healthy next generation and all. Do you think that the entire reason they live longer is because of their diet? Comments are not the place to argue, but your argument by idiocy isn't that convincing either. – Ryan Oct 09 '14 at 15:48
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    @ryan My point is that what we're "designed" to do doesn't answer the question. So far as I know we're designed to live long enough to have kittens of our own, after which who cares. Looking at teeth may prove cats have evolved to to be carnivorous; it doesn't tell me whether a natural (feral) or unnatural (store-bought) diet is healthier in the long-term than a carefully-designed vegetarian diet. – ChrisW Oct 09 '14 at 15:53
  • Ask your vet. They will tell you no, that cats need animal protein. – Andy Aug 15 '18 at 01:11
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  • PETA is not a reliable source for any animal-related information. They've repeatedly been caught distorting the truth and/or outright lying. 2) Cats are obligate carnivores. You want your pet to join you in your vegetarian lifestyle, get a gerbil or a hamster.
  • – Shadur-don't-feed-the-AI Dec 10 '20 at 10:49