Protein: How Exotic Birds Metabolize It
December 7, 2012 § Leave a Comment
Just this week I have had many questions come into my email account regarding the topic of protein in our exotic companion birds’ diet. This seems to be a topic that many of us have been left feeling confused about due to the misinformation we have been dealt.
I am going to attempt to make this a relatively short article, but I promise nothing because this is a rather involved subject matter due to the fact that we have been duped into believing something totally incorrect about how our “parrots” which are in a class of their own as “Aves” derive, digest, absorb and metabolize protein compared to “Mammals”, which they are not.
Let me first explain the main difference of “Aves” to “Mammals” specifically where “protein” needs are concerned. Let me stress I am going to be discussing the protein requirements of these two classes, and that’s about all, so please don’t expect me to go into detail about much else regarding these two classes in this particular article except where it concerns the consumption, digestion, absorption and metabolism of proteins.
Many Mammals, but not all, are carnivorous; they eat meat (muscle tissue), and other animal protein sources, in abundance in order to replenish their body’s protein requirements. There are other nutrients they receive from muscle tissue sources, but remember, we are discussing the protein requirements in this article. But our parrots do not eat muscle tissue as the main part of their protein supply. Instead they consume mostly plant matter and their body utilizes the plant proteins for their protein supply. In smaller quantities they consume larvae and insects for the “animal protein” they supply.
Many mammals are omnivorous; they eat muscle tissue as well as vegetative matter and have a cecum, a fairly small organ, but relative to the size of the creature, off to the side of the small intestine that aids in the digestion of cellulose in vegetative matter. However, a cecum is not necessary for the digestion of meat and grains, only vegetative matter, mainly vegetables, grasses, herbs, leaves and any roughage. Many mammals ruminate, or “chew their cud” (but not all). They have more than one “stomach”, so their food goes through many digestive processes, not just one.
But our parrots do not have a cecum so consuming tough fibrous matter is not advisable for them, yet still they consume mostly plant matter as the main source of their protein supply. And our parrots do not ruminate, so they don’t have multiple stomachs, they have one, fairly narrow and short digestive tract.
So if in the Wild parrots do not consume a large volume of muscle tissue in order to fulfill their protein requirements and they cannot consume a lot of tough fibrous vegetative matter because they lack a cecum that aids in breaking down the cellulose in vegetative matter, and they don’t have multiple stomachs in which to “chew their cud”, how do they receive enough quality protein to keep their protein level at maximum in order to remain in optimum health?
The “plant” material of choice for our frugivorous / herbivorous exotic birds is mainly berries and fruit and the seed contained within them. They also consume nuts, the larvae and insects within the berries, fruit, seed and nuts they consume, tender young grasses/leaves/herbs, dirt/clay and other foods, and sometimes they scavenge for meat off of dead carcasses, but I reiterate, this is not their main choice of protein.
But the proteins in plants, like the berries, fruits, seed, nuts and grasses/leaves and herbs our birds would consume in the Wild are “locked” in those food sources. In other words they are bound by phytic acids that protect the plant from being destroyed by pests and predators. So how do our exotic birds manage to derive any dietary protein from these plant sources?
This is the key part the commercial bird food manufacturers have not been telling us…
Instead we have been told that our birds cannot absorb protein unless they receive adequate levels of the amino acid “methionine” in their daily diet. So what does the commercial bird food manufacturer do? They make sure to place the synthetic form of methionine in their formula of bird food, L-methionine, to ensure that the plant protein in their food is absorbed. One problem, methionine is mainly found in animal proteins. Yes, it is found in small quantities in plant proteins, but not so much. It is abundant in animal proteins because it is the main amino acid necessary to aid in the absorption of animal protein, not plant protein. So this begs the question, “Why are commercial bird manufacturers using an animal protein amino acid to aid in the absorption of plant proteins?” It doesn’t make any sense. The reason they are doing this is because it is very difficult, actually almost impossible to place the digestive enzymes in mass-produced commercial bird food necessary that aids in the absorption of plant proteins because they are destroyed by pressure and/or heat used in the production of highly-processed commercial bird foods.
What are these digestive enzymes that are necessary for plant proteins to be absorbed and the kind of proteins that our exotic birds in the Wild actually THRIVE upon? Proteases.
These proteases are found in very specific foods. They are not found in just any old food. This is why Nature placed certain foods in the very locations our birds originated from. This is why research is finally strongly indicating, and showing with photos, that exotic birds consume berries and fruit in the Wild. Yes, dark berries and fruit have the highest volume of proteases. After that come dark grasses and dark leaves and dark herbs.
These proteases are to plant proteins what methionine is to animal protein; the proteases aid in the absorption of plant protein like methionine aids in the absorption of animal protein. Without the proteases the plant protein DOES NOT get absorbed, it’s that simple.
So you can feed all of the seed and nuts you want thinking you are supplying good sources of protein, but without the proteases from the dark berries and fruit, nada, almost no amount of protein is going to be absorbed from those foods. But you know what will happen? Because these foods are exceptionally high in the amino acid Arginine, and most all foods contain Arginine, your bird will eventually begin to suffer Arginine overload and probably begin to pick and pluck its feathers. Why? Because the amino acid profile is improperly balanced and the Arginine is causing a nitric oxide build up in your bird which is causing inflammation, along with the high amount of omega 6’s that is in most commercial bird foods. In other words the “good fat” ratio is also being thrown off and your bird may have inflammation occurring throughout its body causing anything from feather-destruction to cardiovascular disease simply because your bird is not receiving the correct protein supply containing the correct fatty acids along with the correct carbohydrate source.
And please don’t cloud your reasoning by thinking you can feed vegetables as a good source of these proteases, they just aren’t as abundant in vegetables as they are in the dark berries and fruit. You see dark berries, or berries in general, and fruit are filled with “pectin” where the proteases are found. The cellulose, the tough fibrous matter, is mainly on the outside of the produce where the bird can discard it. Gram for gram berries and fruit contain a much higher percent of pectin in volume than vegetables do. Pectin is a type of fiber that gently flushes the digestive tract of toxins. It acts like a sponge, both extracting toxins, but also delivering nutrients such as fatty acids, amino acids, essential carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals. Contrary to vegetables that yes, do contain many nutrients, but unfortunately for our exotic birds, the high amount of cellulose they contain woven within the vegetable itself, actually scrubs the digestive tract, even of the vegetable’s own nutrients as the food passes through the digestive tract leeching out the nutrients already present in the digestive tract. Plus vegetables are not as high in proteases as berries and fruit to begin with.
But then there is this myth that the “sugar” in berries and fruit will 1)cause yeast infections and 2)cause diabetes. Let me set these myths straight. Neither of these statements are true, they are absolutely incorrect.
The “sugar” in berries and fruit, whether they are wild or domestic, are the most simple, and essential carbohydrates known to science; they are Glucose, Galactose, Mannose, Fucose, Xylose, N-Acetyl-Glucosamine, N-Acetyl-Galactosamine, and N-Acetyl-Neuramanic Acid. These are so important that science has given them an official term, “glycoproteins”. No one thinks of carbohydrates as being “essential” like amino acids or other nutrients, but I assure you, these are the carbohydrates that living creatures MUST have in order to thrive, and they are found abundantly in berries and fruit. Glycoproteins are the method in which cells communicate with each other. Without glycoproteins a living creature’s body would cease to effectively communicate and all systems would be in total chaos, this is the beginning of disease. Ever wonder why we are told to eat an abundance of fruit? This is why, because they contain certain polyphenols that are terrifically powerful anti-oxidants that help prevent all kinds of illness and disease, even acting as anti-carcinogens, ridding the body of all sorts of toxins. When consumed on a regular basis they help keep a living creature’s gut flora in balance because of the way the “sugars” interact with other digestive acids and proteins. These glycoproteins have been found to not only stave off illness and disease, but to actually reverse allergies, viruses, bacterial infections, and all other kinds of auto-immune illnesses and diseases because once added back in to the living creature’s body all systems begin to properly communicate and come back into balance.
So what actually causes yeast infections? It is when the gut flora becomes out of balance and fermentation begins to set in because of consuming foods, or medications, that have caused the gut flora to enter a state of imbalance. And each species has certain foods it was meant to consume and certain foods it was not meant to consume.
Because our exotic birds are in the class of “Aves” they are meant primarily to consume berries, fruit, seed, nuts, and then tender young grasses/leaves/herbs, larvae/insects, dirt/clay, etc. –While some of the berries and fruit they would consume in the Wild would be unripe, containing some fruit starch, they are not meant to consume large volumes of grain and legume starch. I personally believe feeding these foodstuffs to our birds is causing an imbalance in their gut flora and then causing a constant fermenting process in their digestive tract lending itself to an ever-constant low level yeast infection. Yes, these starches are a carbohydrate, and therefore they are “sugar”. But the interesting thing about these starches is that they are “resistant starches” requiring the enzyme “amylase” usually found in the mouth, at the beginning of the digestive process in most creatures, but not found until the lower gut in exotic birds, meaning they do not digest well in exotic birds, and they sit virtually undigested waiting for the enzyme “amylase” from the pancreas to show up in order to begin the digestive process. Unfortunately because this takes place further down in the digestive tract fermentation begins and the gut flora is constantly being put at an imbalance when we feed grains and legumes. Not only does this cause “sugar” to multiply, it places a strain on the pancreas always needing to produce an abundance of amylase and over-produce insulin to handle the constant overload of starch we are placing in our birds’ systems, starch they were never intended to consume. We are creating a “resistant starch” overload and this is why our birds have yeast infections and why we see so many of our birds developing pancreatitis and diabetes, it’s the inability to properly digest the resistant starches (sugars) in grains and legumes, not because we feed berries and fruit (essential carbohydrates).
*Here is the key difference between resistant starches and the way they break down and are absorbed, and the 8 essential carbohydrates in berries and fruit and the way they are absorbed. Resistant starches are slow to break down, often fermenting in the gut providing an excellent breeding ground for candida albicans (yeast) before actually breaking down into a useable nutrient source. On the other hand berries and fruit break down very quickly into useable nutrient sources, something Nature purposely designed having exotic birds in mind so they would not have to carry a large amount of weight in flight in ratio to the amount of energy they receive from their food sources. Resistant starch breaks down into glucose causing a glucose overload in the system. While in some cases this can be useful to manage some blood sugar problems that have already arisen due to improper diets causing an insulin problem, for healthy bodies this glucose overload presents a problem because living creatures are not designed to properly function on glucose alone, they are designed to function on all 8 essential carbohydrates listed above. And this is why a diet that contains berries and fruit supplies, in balance, all 8 essential carbohydrates, not just glucose as an isolated carbohydrate.
So there we have it, the reason for yeast infections and the precursor to diabetes, feeding our birds what is not indigenous to their body’s needs, and what their system was not designed to consume, an over-load of resistant starches. Our birds are becoming ill because we are not feeding them what their system was designed to consume, an abundance of berries and fruit with limited amounts of the other foods they are designed to consume.
Basically, any illness or “dis-ease” is caused by an imbalance in the living creature that is ill. Getting to the root of the problem will solve the illness and disease in most cases. If the body is fed the right kinds of food specific to that species’ particular needs, and the environment is healthy as well, then most living creatures will thrive. This is the reason for research and diet exploration of exotic birds in the Wild. We are finally beginning to realize that we cannot feed our exotic birds like we have been feeding poultry because their digestive systems are completely different, and they originate from completely different regions, and they live completely different lives in the regions they come from. It’s like we have been trying to take a fish out of water and make it breathe air…there is no way a fish is going to be able to survive on air anymore than a parrot can survive on chicken scratch.
What does this have to do with protein?
Take a look at your commercial bird food ingredient list.
Take a look at the list of ingredients in your homemade mash.
Ten to one they both contain high amounts of grains, legumes and vegetative matter.
But they are virtually void of berries and fruit.
If this is the case then your bird may not be receiving proteases.
And if this is the case your bird may be receiving plant proteins, but your bird is not absorbing adequate plant proteins.
But your bird may be receiving too much in the way of cellulose that is leeching nutrients from the digestive tract.
And your bird may be receiving too many resistant starches that are causing an imbalance in gut flora that may be causing a hidden yeast infection and leading to insulin problems that may result in pancreatitis or diabetes.
I ask you, please, do not feed commercially prepared “protease formulas”. It is very, very difficult to formulate an enzyme formula and have it remain stabilized without the enzymes dying off, and without a preservative. I can almost guarantee that any enzyme formula you purchase will contain some kind of preservative in order to stabilize the enzymes. The best source of proteases will come from fresh, organic dark berries, berries in general and fruit. These also contain the polyphenols (anthocyanins) specific to berries and fruit that help fight cancer and keep the cardiovascular system humming. Feeding fresh organic is always best, but during the Winter you may have to purchase frozen and defrost to room temperature before feeding (our exotic birds’ internal temperature is 103-105 degrees), or feed dried, unsulfured. No, there is not more “sugar” in dried fruit, drying it does not cause more sugar to magically occur within the fruit. Yes, it concentrates the carbohydrates because the moisture is absent, but gram for gram the same amount of carbohydrate is present. Drying the fruit doesn’t change the composition of the carbohydrate; it is still the same simple, essential carbohydrate it was before dehydrating. So feed the dried fruit with confidence!
Who would have ever known that carbohydrates had so much to do with protein in our birds’ diets? But they do when they are the right kind of carbohydrates, the kind that contain high amounts of proteases that break the plant proteins down into useable sources of smaller units of proteins our birds’ digestive systems, specifically the metabolic system was designed to recognize!
So much for writing a short article…
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Machelle Pacion / The BEST Bird Food™ / BirD-elicious!™ / Passion Tree House LLC © 2012 All Rights Reserved
*Information supplied by The BEST Bird Food™ or any of its contributors, associates, et al, does not intend to diagnose, treat or cure any symptom, illness or disease. Any information provided is strictly for the purpose of “sharing” resources. Should a reader decide to use any such information they do so at their own risk and holds author(s) and associates, et al, of The BEST Bird Food blog harmless in any and all legal matters concerning their health and the health of their family and/or friends and/or colleagues who they may share the information with as well as all of their pets and/or livestock whom they may practice the information upon.
Gut Flora Building Smoothie!
May 11, 2012 § 2 Comments
A nationally known and recognized bird magazine shared a smoothie recipe for our companion birds recently. It was a good recipe I have to admit. But I came up with one that would do what, well smoothies are supposed to do, rehabilitate the natural digestive enzymes. So I thought I may as well share it with all of my readers!
I don’t believe in using cow’s milk yogurt because of the amount of lactose and casein it contains. It is common knowledge that lactose is virtually indigestible for any human older than a young toddler because we don’t produce lactase-phlorizin hydrolase, or LPH, the digestive enzyme necessary to metabolize lactose, neither do birds.
And casein is a glue-like substance that is literally used to make the desk glue we use to bind paper and other products together in our schools and offices.
Why would anyone want to feed our companion birds yogurt that contains high levels of these two ingredients? I wouldn’t.
Which brings me to the point, DO NOT feed your bird yogurt, or any dairy product for that matter, unless you absolutely NEED to rebuild the intestinal flora in a hurry. If you just want to support the intestinal flora, use this recipe WITHOUT the yogurt all together.
So this is where “goat’s milk” yogurt comes in. It doesn’t contain high levels of either of these ingredients. In fact the lactose in goat’s milk is much more gut-friendly lactose than cow’s milk lactose and goat’s milk only contains only a slight amount of measurable casein. This is why goat’s milk is so easily digested over cow’s milk for those who cannot drink cow’s milk.
So now that I have explained my use of goat’s milk yogurt, let me get on with the rest of the recipe.
Mango. This fruit is exceptionally high in both the essential amino acid Lysine, one the main building blocks of protein and well as essential fatty acids.
Papaya. This fruit is exceptionally high in digestive enzymes, one of the main reasons for a smoothie in the first place.
Blueberries. Exceptionally high in anti-oxidants.
Lemon or Red Grapefruit. High in Vitamin C which will aid as an anti-oxidant, anti-histamine and have an overall calming effect on the mood of your bird.
Flax seed oil. Exceptionally high in Omega 3 fatty acids which will help with heart health, brain function, has an overall calming effect and aids in the conditioning of skin, feathers, talons and beak.
Always use ORGANIC. Why? Fruits, and especially berries have the most amount of pesticides used on them than any other food stuff. And if you are using dried fruits be sure to use the “unsulfured” version. How will you know? The sulfured version is always bright like it was just picked off the tree. The truly organic and natural version will be dark and, well, ugly. LOL.
*There is no ice to this recipe because our birds do not need to consume something so cold, they are extremely warm-blooded creatures.
Quantities:
♥ Goat’s Milk Yogurt: 1 Tblsp.
♥ Mango: 1/4 cup
♥ Papaya: 1 Tblsp.
♥ Blueberries: 1 Tblsp.
♥ Lemon or Red Grapefruit (Meat only): Apprx 1/2 to 1 Tsp.
♥ Flax Seed Oil (Not high Lignin)(Keep refrigerated) 1/16 Tsp.
Keep refrigerated or in freezer. Freezing will NOT kill the enzymes.
I suggest allowing warming to almost room temperature before feeding.
May feed in daily increments over 5-7 day period.
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Machelle Pacion / The BEST Bird Food / BirD-elicious! / Passion Tree House LLC © 2012 All Rights Reserved
*Information supplied by The BEST Bird Food or any of its contributors, associates, et al, does not intend to diagnose, treat or cure any symptom, illness or disease. Any information provided is strictly for the purpose of “sharing” resources. Should a reader decide to use any such information they do so at their own risk and holds author(s) and associates, et al, of The BEST Bird Food blog harmless in any and all legal matters concerning their health and the health of their family and/or friends and/or colleagues who they may share the information with as well as all of their pets and/or livestock whom they may practice the information upon.
Digestive Enzymes: The Beginning of Good Health (Goat’s Milk Yogurt)
November 3, 2011 § Leave a Comment
I’ve had a lot of my avian nutritional consultation clients coming to me lately asking what kind of “pro-biotic” I recommend for birds. Well the fact of the matter is I usually don’t recommend a “brand” of pro-biotic because I don’t believe in them. I believe that if a bird is being fed the right diet it will not need pro-biotics (digestive enzymes).
Digestive enzymes are something your bird’s digestive tract naturally contains if your bird is basically healthy. Birds have a slightly acidic digestive tract, on the lower side of the Ph level, about 2.3 -3.2 and sometimes as high as 4, suitable for digesting berries, fruit, plants, seeds, nuts and insects.
The natural digestive enzymes your bird produces are good enough to begin breaking down any foods your bird would naturally consume in the wild, similar to the foods you should be feeding to your bird. For instance, in addition to hydrochloric acid and pepsin, your bird’s digestive tract contains mucous. The mucous acts as a barrier against microorganisms to prevent infection. The hydrochloric acid is a mild gastric acid with a low Ph that begins to break down even the toughest of seeds and nuts as well as fibrous grasses. Together, the hydrochloric acid and the mucous get proteins ready for the pepsin to do its job by denaturing the proteins. Once the proteins are denatured, the pepsin begins to do its work and further breaks down the proteins into a useable nutrient for the body system to absorb and metabolize.
How do we ensure that our bird maintains healthy digestive enzymes? It’s mainly in the diet we feed. Birds are meant to eat lots and lots of berries, fruit, the right kind of vegetation, seeds, and some amount of nuts if they are of the larger species. Without this constant influx of vegetation into their digestive tract their system will become sluggish and eventually they will most likely need some form of “good bacteria” re-introduced into their digestive tract in order to rebuild their digestive enzymes. Here again we have another reason why I am such an advocate for feeding whole-foods to our companion birds. Whole foods already contain a myriad of natural enzymes, acids and all kinds phyto-chemicals a living creature needs to maintain a well-balanced digestive system. These fresh, whole foods are known as “pre-biotics” and are the food that “probiotics” feed on in order to make the live bacteria, the healthy gut flora our birds need in their digestive tract to help digest all of the other foods they consume. Some of the best “pre-biotics” to feed our birds so they can grow the “pro-biotics” are papaya, pineapple and slightly green banana, but really all of the fresh berries, fruits, tender leaves, grasses and herb are to be considered “pre-biotics”.
When we rely on highly processed foods, such as ingredients that are finely ground and then re-mixed with other finely ground ingredients, then formed into shapes, dried or baked at moderate to high temperatures, the manufacturing process “pre-digests” the wholesome nutrients to the point where there is no real nutrition left in those “foods”. This is why you see so many added laboratory-produced “vitamins” added back into these processed foods, to help ensure that the “food” contains the RDA (recommended daily allowance) of each standardized nutrient the FDA has set for basic survival. Unfortunately, after all of these years of allowing laboratory-produced nutrients to be added back in to our nutrient-deficient highly-processed foods, scientists are still debating whether a living creature actually has the ability to absorb, metabolize and utilize the artificial vitamins and nutrients in the very same manner as Nature’s very own naturally-occurring nutrients found in whole foods!
I have heard people say they feed laboratory-produced probiotics on a regular basis to their birds to ensure their bird has good digestive enzymes in their digestive tract. In my opinion this is not only unnecessary if a good, healthy diet, high in a variety of organic whole foods are being fed, but could actually be harming your bird’s own ability to manufacture its own digestive enzymes, primarily hydrochloric acid and pepsin.
But what do you do if your bird has been ill and its digestive enzymes have been depleted by illness and/or antibiotics? Again, some people feed pro-biotics to ensure their birds have adequate digestive tracts. I am strongly against using products that tout they are able to build your bird’s digestive enzymes. They normally contain preservatives, colorings or ingredients that are high in the amino acid L-Arginine, which, as I have discussed in earlier articles, can be potentially harmful to our companion birds. But there is an answer if you need to replenish your bird’s gut flora in a hurry.
First of all, like I have mentioned, be sure you are feeding a diet high in vegetation such as herbs, fruits, and tender grasses. But if your bird has been ill, and/or on antibiotics for any length of time, I recommend using something I don’t normally recommend because it is an “animal-based” product. But for the reason of re-building your bird’s digestive enzymes, I will recommend the product. And this product is organic “Goat’s Milk Yogurt”, preferably organically produced.
Now the yogurt has to be specifically organic unflavored goat’s milk yogurt, not cow. The reason being is goat’s milk does not contain the same kind of lactose or casein as cow’s milk. The kind of lactose found in cow’s milk is too difficult to digest because of the complex proteins, and the casein it contains is a glue-like substance that our office glue is literally made from. It causes everything that is ingested to stick to the innards and slows down the absorption process overall.
And besides once cultured into yogurt the live bacteria in yogurt will literally “eat up” the lactose in the yogurt. This means that our birds digestive tract will never have to deal with the digestion of any lactose in the yogurt since birds don’t manufacture “lactase” the digestive enzyme necessary to digest lactose.
Neither does goat’s milk yogurt contain the same kind of casein like cow’s milk. And both human milk and goat’s milk lacks this large-curd indigestible casein all together. In addition, the fat globules are much smaller than those in cow’s milk, thus easier for their smaller digestive tracts to handle.
In other words, goat’s milk and the products made from it are relatively easy to digest for even the most delicate of digestive systems. So introducing the “good bacteria” through the goat’s milk yogurt to your bird is a fairly safe method.
I recommend offering only a tiny amount, say about 1/16 Tsp. per up to 75 grams of body weight, about 1/8 Tsp. from 76-125 grams of body weight, 1/4 Tsp. from 126- 300 grams of body weight, 1/2 Tsp. from 301-500 grams of body weight, 1 Tsp. from 501-750 grams of body weight, 1 – 1/4 Tsp. from 751-1026 grams of body weight and 1-1/2 Tsp. for any weight over 1026 of body weight per day for two to three weeks to see how your bird’s system is going to respond to it. And this little amount is so packed with “good bacteria” is should be enough to restore your bird’s digestive enzymes.
After that time period discontinue for one or two weeks and see how your bird is doing. If it seems like your bird is still suffering digestive problems, or that your bird’s system is still slow to digest and eliminate, or not completely digesting its food, then place your bird back on the goat’s milk yogurt for another course of two to three weeks, then discontinue again and see how this works out. If this doesn’t work, it may be time to visit your avian veterinarian for medical help in rebuilding your bird’s digestive enzymes, or to test to see if other medical problems are involved. In fact, it would probably be a good idea to have your bird visit the veterinarian anyway to rule out any serious illness or disease if you notice that your bird isn’t digesting its food properly.
Digestive enzymes are one of the first levels of defense against illness and disease, plain and simple. If a living creature’s body cannot properly break down the food it is ingesting then the creature will not have the benefit of utilizing the food as its “homeopathic medicine”, because that’s one of the roles food plays in a living creature’s existence, to prevent disease. Besides offering the building blocks to muscle, organ and skin tissue, as well as providing energy, yes, food really does offer healing capabilities. The body must be able to break the food down into microscopic particles, then further down into liquids so that the body can use the micro-nutrients to provide sustenance as well as healing properties to the entire body chemistry on a metabolic level. Without the digestive enzymes, one of the very first parts of the digestion processes, all of this would not be possible. And this is why it is so vitally important that we make absolutely sure we are feeding a diet high in natural, organic whole foods consisting of lots of the right kind of vegetation, seeds, and if your bird is of a larger species, some amount of nuts.
I have a lot more to offer regarding “digestive enzymes” in my upcoming book regarding “avian nutrition”. Please be sure to stay tuned as I continue to provide updates regarding how my book project is coming along!
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© 2013 All Rights Reserved Machelle Pacion / The BEST Bird Food™ / BirD-elicious!™ / Passion Tree House LLC
*Information supplied by The BEST Bird Food™ or any of its contributors, associates, et al, does not intend to diagnose, treat or cure any symptom, illness or disease. Any information provided is strictly for the purpose of “sharing” resources. Should a reader decide to use any such information they do so at their own risk and holds author(s) and associates, et al, of The BEST Bird Food™ blog harmless in any and all legal matters concerning their health and the health of their family and/or friends and/or colleagues who they may share the information with as well as all of their pets and/or livestock whom they may practice the information upon.
