Do Cats Prefer More Nutritious Foods?

Published A Few Days Ago
ADVERTISEMENT

The more nutritious the food, the more satisfied the cat! For a well fed and happy kitty, choose more nutritious meals at mealtime.

Is your cat a picky eater? It turns out that the reason for this behavior might be that your finicky feline may only want the best and most nutritious food available. At least, that’s what researchers discovered about domesticated cats and the foods that they typically prefer.

How a Cat Chooses His Food

When given the option, cats may end up choosing foods that have greater nutritional value, regardless of the tastes and smells of all of the foods that they are presented with.

Here’s how the research went when experts, including scientists from Australia and the United Kingdom, decided to find out how factors like texture, taste, and smell will influence a cat’s food preferences. What these experts already knew, based upon prior research, is that kitties in the wild will naturally hunt down food that will provide the appropriate balance of macronutrients (protein and fat in the case of carnivorous felines).

They started by making three flavors of wet food for the kitties in the study (fish, rabbit, and orange flavored foods). The foods had roughly the same ratio of protein to fat, and they also had the same texture, which was a consistency similar to that of oatmeal.

Once they presented the cats with the three options, they noticed that all of the felines chose the foods in the same order: fish flavor, rabbit flavor, and orange flavor. For many cat parents, this might not sound all that surprising.

But There’s More…

As the experiment went on, the kitties starting choosing different foods based upon the nutritional value of the meals, rather than their flavor. In other words, as their bodies gave feedback on the nutritional value of the foods that they were eating, the cats began consuming more of the foods that would allow them to meet their nutritional needs better.

While their initial preferences were based upon flavor, once the kitties learned the nutritional composition of their food options, they chose those meals that provided the right balance of fat and protein, regardless of how the foods tasted. This is why some kitties started showing a preference for the orange-flavored meals, which had the correct ratio of protein to fat. The rabbit and fish meals, on the other hand, did not have the exact nutrient ratio that the cats knew was required.

Your Kitty’s Instinct for Good Food

The researchers concluded that when cats choose what foods to eat, they are influenced by macronutrient balancing. It appears that felines could receive important signals from their bodies both during and after a meal in order to determine the quality of the foods that they are eating. They can then use that information to choose the right type and amount of food that they need in the future.

If you thought that your kitty only based his food choices on things like texture and flavor, it might be worth considering that there may be more to it than that. Perhaps your kitty knows which foods are the most nutritious for his body, and that’s what plays a part in his pickiness at mealtime.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Like

Frozen Fruit and Lavender Bark for Dogs

Feeling hot and peckish? Break off a piece of this honey-sweetened frozen bark for your dog... and while you''re at it, get a piece for yourself!

Pinto Horse

The Pinto Horse is bred for its color pattern. This is multi-talented horse and it can be used in a variety of settings and for a variety of tasks.

Adoptable Dog of the Week – Lin

Our Adoptable Dog of the Week is Lin, a 2 years old Australian Cattle Dog and Labrador Retriever mix from Nashville, Tennessee.

Angelfish

Angelfish are one of the most popular species of freshwater fish in the aquarium hobby. They are characterized by their vertically compressed bodies.

Be Part of the 10,000 Dog Aging Project To Study Why Smaller Dogs Live

Have you ever wondered why small dogs live longer than large dogs? That''s the catalyst behind the 10,000 Dog Aging Project.

PetGuide’s Best Dog Toy of 2018: Petmate’s Chuckit RingChaser

We’ve searched high and low and are thrilled to announce the winner of the PetGuide Best Dog Toy of 2018 is the Petmate Chuckit RingChaser! It’s…

PetGuide’s Best New Dog Travel Product of 2018: K9 Sport Sack

K9 Sport Sack ensures you get to make most out of your time with your precious pet, without compromising on comfort or style.

Top 10 Super Fly Pet Products From Skymall

Have you heard the news that Skymall, the in-flight catalog that offered a vast array of wacky, never-been-seen items for purchase, is seeking bankruptcy…

Polish Lowland Sheepdog

The shaggy Polish Lowland Sheepdog (or PON as it''s known in the United States) is native to Poland and was bred as a specialist sheep herder.

White Fronted Amazon

With a relatively affordable price and an impressive intelligence, the White fronted Amazon could be a perfect choice for a new pet parrot.

Peacock Cichlids

Compared to other Lake Malawi cichlids, Peacock cichlids are relatively peaceful. They come in a wide variety of bright colors, often in iridescent shades.

5 Foods You Should Never Feed Your Cat

It may look tasty to your kitty, but that doesn’t mean your cat should eat it! What your pet eats can have a big impact on his overall health, so it&rs…

Altai Horse

The Altai horse is also known as the Alta''s Kaya horse. The name is derived from the breed''s place of origin, which is the Altai Mountains in Central Asia.

Anthias

Also referred to as wreckfish, reef fish, swallowtails and jewelfish, anthias are a large family of saltwater fish of over 200 different sub-species.

Donskoy

The Donskoy is a truly unique feline breed. It''s a hairless cat breed; some kittens are born bald, while others are born with fur and become bald over time.