Golden Retriever (confirmed introduction)
How can you choose the dog food that best suits your dog? When buying dog food, it is usually packaged and often cannot be heard or seen, so looking at the ingredient content on the packaging has become the fastest and most effective way to compare. The editor will tell you what the various contents inside and outside of dog food ingredients mean.
1. The content of high-quality dog food should be:
1. High-quality source of meat protein, but it must be explained why the meat is grown, such as only animal meat or waterfowl Meat, which does not indicate why the animal was grown, cannot be delivered (for example, chicken is the correct choice).
2. The top two ranking foods should contain one kind of all-meat source.
3. Unprocessed whole grains, vegetables and other food materials, because unprocessed food contains more and higher-quality nutrients and enzymes (the principle of processing refers to processing).
2. High-quality dog food should contain the minimum amount of:
1. Food residues, such as brewed rice, wheat bran, etc. These grain residues are low in cost due to their low cost. The price is low, and many cat/dog food manufacturers will include at least one of these in dry food to reduce costs. Be careful when purchasing and avoid using grain by-products that contain a variety of these.
2. Meat by-products. All meat by-products are not high-quality protein if they are used as the main source of protein in dog food.
3. High-quality dog food must not contain:
1. A general term for fat or protein sources, such as animal fats. These do not explain the animal fats (should explain such as chicken fat, beef tallow, etc.).
2. Artificial preservatives (BHA, BHT, ETHOXYQUIN).
3 artificial pigments.
4. SWEETENERS. Such as CORN SYRUP, SUCROSE, etc., used to reduce the taste of poor quality food.
5. PROPYLENE GLYCOL, a toxic substance, increases the "moistness" of food and can maintain food
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