Meat Meal (Generic) is a rendered animal-tissue ingredient used in pet food as a concentrated source of animal protein. According to AAFCO definitions, the term "Meat Meal" is a non-specific descriptor that fails to identify the origin species. This ambiguity implies that the raw material could be derived from cattle, pigs, sheep, or any combination thereof. Species-specific meals (e.g., Chicken Meal, Lamb Meal, Salmon Meal) are consistently superior clinical choices compared to generic "Meat Meal."
| AAFCO Definition | Rendered mammal tissue (excl. blood, hair, hoof, etc.) |
| Species Transparency | Low (Ambiguous origin) |
| Protein Concentration | 50-65% (Dry Matter) |
| Ash Content | 15-25% (Indicative of bone inclusion) |
| Nutritional Consistency | Variable / Potentially inconsistent |
VetKriter Audit
Generic "Meat Meal" is one of the primary indicators of low-quality formulation. Due to species ambiguity, consistency is difficult to maintain, and effective allergy elimination trials become impossible. Premium formulations should always utilize named animal proteins.
Nutritional and Economic Rationale
- High Protein Density: Provides a concentrated boost to crude protein percentages.
- Cost Efficiency: Significantly cheaper than species-specific meals or fresh meats.
- Supply Flexibility: Allows manufacturers to fluctuate raw material sourcing based on market pricing without changing the label.
Ambiguity Risks and Digestibility Concerns
The use of generic "meat meal" presents several clinical drawbacks: (1) Origin Ambiguity: The animal species may change between production batches. (2) Allergy Management: In animals with food hypersensitivities, elimination diets fail if the protein source is undefined. (3) Quality Variance: Different mammalian sources possess highly variable amino acid profiles and digestibility coefficients. (4) High Mineral Load: If titled "Meat and Bone Meal," the ash (mineral) content is higher, often diluting protein quality and causing imbalances in calcium/phosphorus ratios.
Scientific FAQ
What is the difference between "Meat Meal" and "Chicken Meal"?
"Chicken Meal" identifies the specific animal source, providing transparency and consistency. "Meat Meal" can be any mammal. For performance and clinical predictability, always look for specific identifiers like "Chicken," "Lamb," or "Beef" rather than the generic "Meat" label.
Scientific References
- AAFCO. Official Publication — Ingredient Definitions. 2024.
- NRC. Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. 2006.
- Hendriks, W.H. et al. (2015). Protein quality assessment of pet food ingredients.