That is true. It's something I specified in my comments. At the same time, products such as Orijen and Evo have found a ready market in the dog food world, so the cap to that limit may be higher than you think. And I'm not referencing the average consumer. The "average" consumer is perfectly happy feeding TetraMin in ignorance. I am referencing the upper tiers of the hobby.
Once again you are mixing the dog world, with the fish keeping world, and they are worlds apart when it comes down to what most consumers are willing to pay for food for their pets. I'm well aware of what dog/cat owners are willing to spend on their loved ones, and I'm also well versed on Orijen food - their plant is located an hour directly north of me, and I have used & recommended their products for many years.
As I said early on in this discussion, in a perfect world .....
Aside from that, what I have to go on are public statements and private communications from individual companies, where I expressly asked if ethoxyquin was in the food, either directly or indirectly. I can only assume companies are honest in these replies as I can only assume you are honest in yours. Some certainly have been because they've identified it as being in some components of the premix, although it's not listed on the label.
Fair enough, but I am telling you up front that is a very foolish assumption. This is a very cut throat industry, where half truths & total BS are an everyday occurrence. And in some cases the people responding may simply not know, because they have never asked themselves. They in turn use that ignorance as their line of defense. What you don't know can't hurt you type of logic. (your honor, I swear on this bible I did not know!)
When I see a company that for a starter doesn't make their own food, but has all of their products sourced out to one or more feed mills, with raw ingredients such as hydrolyzed feather meal, blood meal, and enough starch to sink a small ship (often wheat is the main ingredient) - I can state with 100% certainty the feed mill/s that make these products use raw ingredients preserved with ethoxyquin. Ethoxyquin is not just used by overseas suppliers of fish meal, it is used throughout this industry, including by those based in the USA. There are also several manufacturers/suppliers of ethoxyquin in the USA, including one in your home State of MO.
I did not create this issue. I was not even aware it was one. It was brought to my attention by three separate companies, one of which is in North America. As I stated in my previous comments, apparently imported foods are held to a higher standard as to AAFCO labeling guidelines.
Who says that there is an issue? This is an issue because a company that uses "fish meal" on their label says that it's an issue? Really? Like they wouldn't file a complaint against their competition that is in non-compliance if they felt that it would result in some kind of "stop sale action". Yeah, right. And what exactly are these higher standards that involve "label" definitions that imported foods are held to? What label requirements are they held to, that domestic companies are not? More BS fed to you by a slick talking marketing rep.
No argument. All the more reason to purchase products with locally sourced ingredients or ingredients that are not imported from such locations. One way of doing that is searching for a food that does not contain Ethoxyquin, BHA, or BHT.
So now we are also including BHA, and BHT, because after all it was the same dog fanatics who later took issue with these preservatives as well. Do these people even trust taking an aspirin? lol
Do we have conclusive research showing how these preservatives cause negative health issues when used at the levels they may be found in a commercial fish food? Of course not. Even the dog food fiasco involving these ingredients never held up to scrutiny.
The following is an article on BHA that was written by Dr. Greg Aldrich P.h.D. who writes for the "ingredient issues" section of the Petfood Industry magazine.
http://www.petfoodindustry.com/Columns/Ingredient_Issues/BHA__no_real_risk_can_be_identified.html
BTW - that was a rhetorical question, no need to respond.
This entire discussion seems to be doing nothing but going round & round in circles.
It's always easy to criticize when you are sitting safely high up in the bleachers......