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Details of how Mayeda's LA County shelters rendered 80,000 animals, 42,200 being cats and dogs in 2003.
There is a strange contradiction here as Mayeda says rendered animals are not turned into pet food, then repeatedly states that animals eating dry dog food would not be affected by the small amounts of pentobarbitol therein. I think she knows that despite the renderer's allegations, that company might be lying as much as she is. County does not watch to see whether cats and dogs go into pet food or not.
A reader below posted an obvious rebuttal to her claim. He/she noted that cows, horses and I suppose other farm animals, are not killed with pentobarbitol, and that any present in food would be from pets.
April 8, 2004
Disposal (Rendering) of Deceased Animals from Los Angeles County Animal Shelters
The disposal of deceased animals from County shelters is an emotional and often misunderstood process. This information is provided to answer the majority of questions regarding the disposal of shelter animals.
What happens to the bodies of the animals that are euthanized at County shelters?
Deceased animals are picked up by D&D Disposal, also known as West Coast Rendering, located in Vernon, Calif. The remains are rendered into animal by-products. D&D processes hundreds of tons of animal carcasses, tissues and by-products that would otherwise end up in landfills.
What in involved in the rendering process?
Rendering is a means of recycling animal remains. The remains are placed in large vats and heated to a high temperature in excess of 265 degrees Fahrenheit, at which point they become
sterile and free of pathogens. Then a series of mechanical process occur that separate the fat, liquid, and proteins into separate collection systems.
The majority of rendered materials are remains of cattle, hogs, poultry, and sheep – the parts that cannot be sold for meat, leather, or other products. Other animal remains, such as butcher scraps, restaurant grease, fish, zoo animals, marine life, and animals from shelters are rendered as well.
What happens to the animal remains – how are they used?
The end results of the rendering process are tallow/grease and protein solids. Depending on the grade of rendered product and the markets the business sells to, the remains can be found in lubricants, polish, soap, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, gelatin, fertilizers, pet foods (from rendered livestock – NOT DOGS AND CATS), and agricultural feed.
The remains of animals rendered by D&D are made into a protein-rich product called “tankage” and are shipped to Asia where tankage is used as part of the local aquaculture. The tankage is used to feed shrimp, which in turn are fed to eels. Sometimes the tankage is used in hog and chicken feed.
How prevalent is animal rendering?
Animal rendering has been practiced for over a hundred years as a means of salvaging protein and fat content from otherwise waste material. According to the 1997 US Census, there are 239 rendering establishments in the United States with 21 facilities in California.
However very few are able, due to volume or food-quality constraints, to accept animals from animal shelters. D&D is the only establishment in southern California that provides this service. All animal shelters in southern California use D&D for the disposal of their animals.
Are rendered pets from the County used as ingredients in pet food?
NO. D&D assures us that pet remains are not used as pet food ingredients. In addition, a 2002 study by the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Veterinary Medicine (FDA/CVM) developed a test to detect dog and cat DNA in dog food. The results, “demonstrated a complete absence of material that would have been derived from euthanized dogs or cats”.
Does the Department receive money from the rendering company?
No. The County pays D&D for the removal of dead animals from its shelters.
Is the euthanasia agent, sodium pentobarbital, found in pet food?
Sodium pentobarbital (pentobarbital) is not completely degraded during the rendering process, and minute portions may be found in pet food. However, the FDA/CVM’s 2002 study stated, “the pentobarbital residues are entering pet foods from euthanized, rendered cattle or even horses.”
Additionally, the levels of pentobarbital residue were found to be so low that the CVM concluded that “it is highly unlikely a dog consuming dry dog food will experience any adverse affects from exposures to the low levels of pentobarbital.”
How many animals does the County send D&D?
Last year the County sent approximately 80,000 animals to D&D. However, these were not all euthanized dogs and cats. Of this number, 21,583 were dead animals removed from streets or animal bodies surrendered by their owners after their pets passed away.
Furthermore, 7,294 were pets that were euthanized at the request of their owners, usually for medical and humane reasons. Additionally, 9,264 were animals other than dogs and cats, such as livestock, wildlife, birds, rabbits, etc.
The remaining 42,486 were dogs and cats euthanized at our six County shelters.
What alternatives to the rendering process are available for animal disposal?
Right now, there are none. It is less safe to bury euthanized animals in landfills because the sodium pentobarbital is still present in their bodies.
Scavenging animals may ingest the pentobarbital and become ill or die (recently, a number of bald eagles were found to have died from this source in the U.S.). Also, it is unclear whether landfills would accept deceased animals because they may not be able to handle the volume.
Cremation would require a very large scale, full-time operation to be able to process the volume of animals and would be much more expensive. There are also concerns whether the EPA would permit such an operation in this area due to present concerns about air quality. Finally, the image of crematoriums also generates emotional reactions and may not be more aesthetically.
Other Information: According to the FDA, prior to the appearance of BSE (mad cow disease), there was no evidence of human or animal disease associated with the feeding of properly rendered and handled animal feed ingredients despite the use of tissues from diseased animals or animals that have died otherwise than by slaughter.
Further, the Department of Animal Care and Control would not consider any other means of euthanasia other than sodium pentobarbital. It is universally regarded as the most humane and painless method of euthanasia.
They don't kill cows and horses with pentobarbitol. They use captive bolt guns or cow punches besides just slitting their throats. If pentobarbitol is getting into pet food, it is coming from pets. You must use pentobarbitol to kill pets but not cattle and horses. It's cheaper to use a cow punch than drugs. You can't use pentobarbitol or gas to kill an animal which may be eaten. The half life of these drugs are very long.
ReplyDeleteI thought city shelters also made money from selling the animals' dead bodies to the rendering plants. Am I wrong? I think ending this practice would be a no-brainer first step to no-kill. Not to mention the practice of putting these types of by-products into products that are consumed by living beings should be outlawed. I never use food with by-products and feed my dogs a vegetarian diet. It's sick.
ReplyDeleteRead this link on rendered animals in pet food.
ReplyDeletehttp://vonhapsburg.homestead.com/petfood.html
Legally "pets" must be euthanized with pentobarbitol. Wildlife can be killed by other means. Animals that are killed for food can't have antibiotics or pentobarbitol in them. We are turning dead pets into toxic waste.
ReplyDeleteThe pentobarbitol survives the recycling process. they boil the animals into a soup and sell the fat, protein and leftover stuff to different companies. Those companies add it to plastics and feed fish, cow, chickens with it in other countries. Then we buy that food and import it. It's illegal for them to use in here as food for fish, cows or chicken. We are eating dead pets, pets who died from illness, tumors, ground up eyes, dead fetuses, ground up bits of microchips, collars, pins, bb's... It's like eating ground beef but much more toxic.
We need to find another way to euthanize animals humanely that doesn't turn them into toxic waste.