Have you checked your cat food recently?
Coco, like most American cats, ate fish. And a great deal of them -- more in a year than the average African human, according to Jason Clay at the World Wildlife Fund. And unlike the chicken or beef Coco also gobbled up, all those fish were wild animals, scooped out of the sea and flown thousands of carbon-belching miles to reach his little blue bowl.
That's right! Your cat has a carbon and fish footprint.
The use of wild fish in animal feed is a serious problem for the world's food systems. Around a third of all wild fish caught are "reduced" into fish meal and fish oil. And yet most of the outrage about this is focused not on land-based animals like Coco but on other fish -- namely farm-raised fish.The pet food industry now uses about 10 percent of the global supply of forage fish. The swine industry consumes 24 percent of fish meal and oil -- fish oil being considered the best way to wean piglets. Poultry meanwhile takes as much as 22 percent, which means that even when Coco ate chicken, indirectly he was still eating fish. (It's worth pointing out, too, that the PCBs that concentrate in farmed salmon similarly concentrate in pigs and chickens. A PCB is the same persistent carcinogen no matter what form of flesh delivers it to the human digestive tract.)
So...what does your cat eat?
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Tags: cat food, fish meal, fish oil, PCPs, seafood
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