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Similar to omnivorous dogs, vegan dogs need variety in their diets, and there are numerous options.
I receive numerous emails from people concerning meal plans for their canine companions. They often ask if there are any general "rules of thumb," do dogs really need to be fed as if they're wolves, what about so-called "people food," and how about vegetarian or vegan diets.
A few days ago, I
received an email from Dottie asking, "Can my dog do okay on vegan 'people
food'?" Dottie's dog is named Marcel, and she told me that while he's "doing
great on a healthy and balanced diet of vegan people food and her vet
agrees," some people criticize her for not paying attention to the fact that
Marcel is a really carnivore who has descended from wolves and needs meat.
In fact, dogs are more omnivores than carnivores, according to a
veterinarian and nutritionist.
I decided to write this essay because Dottie's question contains two of the
most common questions that come my way, namely, can dogs thrive on vegan
diets and other meal plans that contain a lot of "people food." In a
previous essay titled "Should I Really Be Feeding 'The Wolf' in My Dog?" I
answered a woman's question by writing, "When it comes to diet, treating
dogs like wolves doesn’t make biological or nutritional sense." The woman
who sent it was confused because of all of the "glitzy advertisements and
hype" about the "best" meal plan for dogs. I fully understood her dilemma,
so I began my answer to her simply by noting that dogs are not wolves and I
was not a fan of feeding "the wolf in a dog." While it's true that a
domesticated wolf (but not a socialized wolf) is a dog, there are many
differences between wolves and dogs including their meal plans and dietary
needs.
I also wrote about the large differences in activity levels between wolves
and dogs and that many veterinarians are concerned that there are too many
obese individuals among our canine companions. Feeding dogs as if they're
wolves could be part of the problem. In addition to having radically
different activity levels, dogs and wolves may no longer have identical
nutritional needs. For example, researchers recently uncovered an
interesting genetic difference between dogs and wolves, namely, that dogs
appear to have a greater ability to digest starches. The wolf genome has
only two copies of the gene alpha-amylase 2B (AMY2B), which helps with the
processing of starch in the pancreas, while dogs have somewhere between four
and thirty copies of this gene.
While advertisements for dog food may tout something along the lines of
“Feed the wolf in your dog” or “Dogs evolved, but their instincts remain,”
these sorts of comparisons can be fraught with error when it comes to actual
feeding advice.
What about vegan diets and so-called "people food?"
"Fruits and veggies and grains do not have high enough amounts of cellulose
to cause issues with digestion for dogs." (Dr. Cailin Heinze)
Many people get pretty "hot under the collar" when they discuss whether or
not dogs can do well on homemade or commercial vegan diets, and opinions
range all over the place. I was surprised when I saw a recent essay called
"ONE IN THREE PET-OWNERS KEEN TO FEED THEIR ANIMALS A VEGAN DIET" in which I
read, "A survey of more than 3,670 dog and cat owners from around the world
found that 35 per cent are interested in putting their pets on a vegan diet
while 27 per cent of respondents who follow a vegan diet themselves have
already done so." The lead author of the study upon which this essay was
based, Dr. Sarah Dodd of the veterinary college at the University of Guelph
in Canada, "said she was surprised at how many pet-owners were already
feeding their animals exclusively vegan food."
When I decided to go vegetarian and then vegan and choose to do the same
for some of my canine companions, we all did very well. I paid very close
attention to all of our meal plans, and they and other dogs who I knew were
also being fed vegan diets, did as well as their omnivorous friends. When
I've asked veterinarians from time to time about their impressions about the
health of vegan dogs, they agreed that they did as well as others who
enjoyed mixed meal plans. A few of my dogs loved bagels and peanut butter,
rice and bean burritos, and various fruits and vegetables. Of course, I
never fed them chocolate or other foods to which they might have negatively
responded (onions, garlic, avocados, nutmeg, grapes and raisins, macadamia
nuts, caffeine, alcohol, marijuana, and xylitol, a sugar substitute that can
be found in some sugar-free foods and gums). They were incredibly active,
ran off-leash much of the time, never suffered from obesity, and lived long
and healthy lives.
Concerning "people food," dog advice columns often decry giving dogs people
food, but there is no scientific evidence that the foods we eat are
necessarily bad for dogs—or at least, no worse for them than they sometimes
are for us. Indeed, this distinction between people food and dog food is
more of a marketing gimmick than anything else.
Dogs coevolved with humans in part by eating our leftovers and throwaways. Claims that foods such as bread and pasta are bad for dogs don’t have any scientific backing. Setting aside food that is unhealthy for anyone or poisonous, most of the foods we eat seem acceptable for dogs to eat. One of my canine companions, Jethro, loved pasta and, as I wrote above, dogs have somewhere between four and thirty copies of the gene alpha-amylase 2B (AMY2B), which helps with the processing of starch in the pancreas. And, Tufts University veterinarian and nutritionist Dr. Cailin Heinze notes, "Most dogs’ pancreases work very well at this task and dogs do a very good job breaking down starch from plants. The digestibility of most plants that are a common part of human diets is quite high in dogs, not all that different from what it is in people. There is no evidence that feeding a higher carbohydrate diet damages the pancreas in any way." Dr. Heinze goes on to write, "Fruits and veggies and grains do not have high enough amounts of cellulose to cause issues with digestion for dogs."
Pay careful attention to individual differences and seek professional advice when necessary
Dogs show remarkable variability in their tastes for different foods. For
example, my colleague Jessica Pierce's two dogs, Bella and Maya, are nothing
alike. Bella has a wide palate and will eat carrots, peas, apples,
raspberries, and nearly every other food offered to her. Maya dislikes
fruits and vegetables and will carefully pick them out of Jessica’s
offerings, even if they’re hidden under thick gravy. Jethro was the
consummate omnivore, refusing just about nothing: He ate everything he was
offered or that he discovered on the floor, on a counter, or outdoors while
on the prowl. One of his nicknames was Leadbelly. On the other hand, Inuk
was a disturbingly picky eater who would stick his nose up even when offered
a patty of wet dog food laced with ketchup—something Jethro would
instantaneously inhale without a snort.
Variety is the spice of life. Indeed, dogs may enjoy, as we do, experiencing
a variety of taste sensations. Who wants to eat the same stuff every day?
That’s boring. Similar to omnivorous dogs, vegan dogs need variety in their
diets, and there are numerous options.
There's still much we don’t know about the ideal canine diet, despite the
many claims we hear from dog food manufacturers, veterinarians, and
self-proclaimed dog experts. Very few of these claims are backed by
scientific research and actual evidence, so it’s best to treat this advice
as mostly opinion and anecdote, some of which is clearly intended to sell
this or that brand of dog food. Dogs' mouths aren't trash cans. And, what’s
most essential, is that you pay very close attention to what your dog likes
and dislikes and feed their fancy. Individuals' tastes matter.
So, can Dottie's dog, Marcel, do okay on vegan people food? Yes, he can, and
many experts agree. So too can other dogs as long as their human companions
pay close attention to their health and seek professional guidance when
needed, things they should do regardless of their dog's diet. Say tuned for
more discussion of canine meal plans and numerous ways to make them more
humane and at the same time as nutritious as they can be.
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