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Why Your Cat is an Obligate Carnivore

As obligate carnivores, cats thrive on meat-based diets. Read on to learn why cats are strict obligate carnivores, how this affects their biology, FAQs and more.

What is an Obligate Carnivore?

There are three distinct groups of eaters in the animal kingdom: carnivores, herbivores and omnivores. Carnivores thrive on meat-based diets, herbivores on plant-based diets and omnivores on both meat and plants.

An obligate carnivore is one that depends entirely on meat because their diet requires nutrients that are only found in animal flesh. According to National Geographic, plants do not provide enough nutrients for an obligate carnivore, and their body is unable to digest plants properly. Most carnivores are not obligate carnivores. Besides felines, dolphins, seals, eagles and walruses are also obligate carnivores.

Why Are Cats Obligate Carnivores?

All felines are obligate carnivores, whether it’s a domesticated house cat or a wild mountain lion. Throughout their entire evolutionary history, cats have been obligate carnivores, making their need for meat a biological necessity and an ancestral trait.

Biological Features of Obligate Carnivores

The anatomic and physiologic adaptations of a cat include unique characteristics that make it easier to eat a meat-based diet.

Generally thought of as hunters, cats have evolved by eating raw prey immediately after it has been hunted. A cat’s digestive tract is short compared to other types of eaters, and it is designed to digest protein and fat quickly.

The necessity of eating meat, which may involve hunting live prey, makes sharp teeth and claws a common adaptation of obligate carnivores. Cats have four front canine teeth that help them grip and bite into flesh, and their strong jaw is extremely helpful to facilitate ripping the meat from prey’s bone and to aid in shredding the meal. 

Cats’ ears and eyes are also designed to make it easier to hunt, according to Cat-World. Their forward-facing ears are made up of 20 different muscles that can detect and locate the sounds of prey. Their eyes contain many rod cells in the retina, which makes it easy for them to see in very low light. 

Metabolic Adaptations

As carnivores, cats thrive on a diet consisting primarily of meat. However, unlike herbivores or omnivores, cats are less able to adapt to wide rages in dietary composition.

Feline-Nutrition explains that a meat-only diet offers some vitamins and fatty acids in a preformed state. Since cats can get these nutrients from the animals they are eating, their bodies no longer have the ability to make certain vitamins and amino acids like herbivores or omnivores can. Cats have a dire biological need for niacin, taurine, vitamin A and arginine, all of which can be found in meat sources.

Nutritional Needs for Cats

Unlike humans and many other animals, cats can get adequate energy from protein and fat and have no minimum requirement for carbohydrates. Cats, however, do have a minimum glucose requirement, primarily to supply energy to the brain with glucose being derived from carbohydrates.

Fat and protein provide cats with much more than energy. Fats facilitate the absorption of fat soluble nutrients while protein is truly the building material of a cat’s new body tissue.

While proteins can come from plant matter, animal sources are best for the completeness of their amino acid profiles. Amino acids allow proteins to be used by the animal in growth and regeneration. There are essential amino acids that a cat must get from what they eat, and non-essential amino acids that a cat's body can synthesize. 

Of course, as with all living things, water is the most important nutrient for cats. Fresh and clean water should be available at all times because dehydration can cause countless health problems and even death.

Can My Cat be Vegan?

Because cats are obligate carnivores, the ASPCA advises against a vegan diet. “Feeding a cat a plant-based diet is a lot like feeding a cow a meat-based diet — their digestive system isn't geared to handle it, and they will not thrive on it.”

If you are interested in a vegan diet for your cat, you should talk to your vet before making any adjustments to your cat’s food.

FAQs

Q: What is the difference between a carnivore and an obligate carnivore?

A: A carnivore is an animal that thrives on a meat-based diet, while an obligate carnivore requires a meat-based diet in order to survive. Carnivores may eat other sources of nutrients, such as plants and fungi. Obligate carnivores are unable to get the nutrients they need from plants and fungi.

Q: Should I feed my cat a raw diet?

A:  Raw food diets can provide more efficient amounts of protein than processed diets, but switching a cat to a raw diet should be done carefully and methodically. If not prepared correctly, bacteria like Salmonella and E.coli can make both the humans and pets in the house very sick. 

RAWZ’s high-protein, minimally processed food is designed to feed the obligate carnivore in your cat. Browse our meal-free dry and gum-free wet food options for cats here.

For more information about raw diets and your cat's carnivorous needs, check out these related articles:

 
 
 
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Jim Scott
Co-Founder
A third-generation RAWZ family member, Jim spreads the word of optimal pet nutrition through in-store product demos and regular articles for the RAWZ blog. After sustaining a traumatic brain injury in 2006, Jim began participating in the writing program at the Krempels Center in Portsmouth, NH. Writing was a way to process and heal from his injury — but Jim realized he could also use this skill to spread awareness of the RAWZ brand and mission. Jim covers a range of pet health issues for the company blog, as well as more personal stories that connect to the causes RAWZ supports. His favorite thing to write about? People’s strong bonds with their pets.
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