Obligate carnivore: Difference between revisions

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An '''obligate''' or '''true [[carnivore]]''' is an animal that subsists on a diet consisting ''only'' of meat. They may consume other products presented to them, especially [[animal product]]s like [[cheese]] and [[bone marrow]] or sweet sugary substances like [[honey]] and [[syrup]] but, as these items are not essential they do not consume these on a regular basis. Obligate carnivores lack the [[physiology]] required for the efficient [[digestion]] of vegetable matter and cannot survive on a solely [[vegetarian]] diet.<ref>{{cite web
An '''obligate''' or '''true [[carnivore]]''' is an animal that subsists on a diet consisting ''only'' of meat. They may consume other products presented to them, especially [[animal product]]s like [[cheese]] and [[bone marrow]] or sweet sugary substances like [[honey]] and [[syrup]] but, as these items are not essential they do not consume these on a regular basis. Obligate carnivores lack the [[physiology]] required for the efficient [[digestion]] of vegetable matter and cannot survive on a solely [[vegetarian]] diet.Herbivores are carnivores, but not true carnivores.<ref>{{cite web
| title = Pets and Vegetarianism
| title = Pets and Vegetarianism
| publisher = Provet
| publisher = Provet
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==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references



{{biology-stub}}
{{biology-stub}}

Revision as of 00:13, 1 May 2007

An obligate or true carnivore is an animal that subsists on a diet consisting only of meat. They may consume other products presented to them, especially animal products like cheese and bone marrow or sweet sugary substances like honey and syrup but, as these items are not essential they do not consume these on a regular basis. Obligate carnivores lack the physiology required for the efficient digestion of vegetable matter and cannot survive on a solely vegetarian diet.Herbivores are carnivores, but not true carnivores.[1] In fact, some carnivorous mammals eat vegetation specifically as an emetic.

References

<references

  1. ^ "Pets and Vegetarianism". Provet. Retrieved March 21, 2007.