Quote from: PaleoPhil on Today at 11:01:09 AM
You're referring to facultative carnivores. I haven't seen any observational reports of obligate carnivores in the wild eating plant foods. Plus, sometimes indigestible plants are eaten for medicinal and purgative purposes, rather than for nutritive value, so I could imagine even obligate carnivores eating biologically inappropriate foods for those purposes. Also, if you've ever seen the feces of a coyote, wolf or other wild canine after they eat berries, you know how poorly even facultative wild carnivores tend to digest plant foods.
The vegan canard of wild canines regularly ingesting stomach contents has been refuted here multiple times. The only times facultative carnivores allegedly eat it is when they are starving or severely nutritionally deficient, and even then I've yet to see an actual documented observation in the wild. In contrast, I've observed a video of a wolf emptying out the contents of a stomach and intestines before eating the tissue. On the other hand, I have read reports of Inuits eating stomach contents apparently while not starving (but perhaps deficient in one or more nutrients?), so I wouldn't rule out occasional ingestion by wild canines for the reasons above, and more study is needed.
I neither believe human is obligate carnivore, nor wild canine eat berries for no reason.
Please show me where I wrote that humans are obligate carnivores. I don't see that. My point was that obligate carnivores don't necessarily "eat a small quantity of vegetable (grass, berries, stomach content, etc...)," so claiming that all carnivores do is incorrect, at least as a normal part of their diet (I could imagine obligate carnivores very rarely eating some of those things, though not all, for medicinal/purgative purposes), based on the evidence I've seen. If you have alternative evidence, feel free to share it. Some of those plants have not been proven to have a dietary function even in facultative carnivores. For example, the reasons why some canines eat grass are not well understood or thoroughly researched, AFAIK. This too may be a case of medicinal/purgative use, rather than nutritional benefit, as domestic dogs seem to engage in it more than wild canines and I've witnessed dogs coughing/vomiting grass back up after eating it.
I think wild canines likely eat wild berries because they taste good to them, don't you? That doesn't mean they digest very well, and if you see their scat afterwards you'll see that they aren't. That being said, I don't think wild animals develop significant problems from occasionally eating foods their physiology is not optimally adapted to digesting, do you? As I've written in the past, I'm hoping to try some wild berries myself this summer, and I call my own approach "facultative carnivore." Vegetarian propaganda has unfortunately convinced many people that if a wild animal ever eats any plant foods, then it is not a carnivore. This is false. To get a sense of just how false this is, consider the giant panda: it is scientifically classified as a carnivore, yet 99% of its diet is bamboo shoots and leaves.
Do you have the links for the "vegan canard" ?
From
http://www.rawpaleoforum.com/general-discussion/aajonus-vonderplanitz-interview-on-one-radio-network-with-host-patrick-timpone/msg21603/#msg21603:
Nora Gedgaudas: "... I spent a whole summer of my life living with wild wolves, less than 500 miles from the North Pole. ... I was able to watch firsthand what the wolves ate and what they didn't eat, and the organ meats were the first things to go [to be eaten] when they made a kill and what was left over--the muscle meat--was something that was ... left behind for the more subordinate animals that were just sort of picking up scraps behind the rest of the pack and just as an interesting aside, ... you hear a lot of vegans talk about when a predator makes a kill the first thing they eat is the stomach, because that's where all the water-rich vegetables are.... We actually observed the exact opposite. In fact we used ... the stomach with a wolf that was a subordinate animal that didn't have much to eat that particular summer and we tossed the stomach her way and consistently she just urinated on it and walked away, and towards the summer when she got really, really, really desperate there was one day we tossed out a stomach of an animal and she gingerly tore it open with her teeth and then shook it as hard as she could until all the stuff inside was shaken out of there, and then she basically ate the tripe."
See also Tyler's post at
http://www.rawpaleoforum.com/carnivorous-zero-carb-approach/100percent-carnivorous-really/msg3506/#msg3506and "Myth: WOLVES INGEST THE STOMACH CONTENTS OF THEIR PREY."
http://www.rawfed.com/myths/stomachcontents.htmlIf you check the sources of the stomach contents canard, you'll find that most of them originate from vegan/vegetarian propagandists, whose dogma has unfortunately infected the Internet and other mass media.