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Holopetwet cats foodAnimondaCarny Beef with ostrich Adult Grain-free
AnimondaVERIFIED · 24 Jun 2026
Re-scan 1w agoNo changesWhat changed?

Animonda Carny Beef with ostrich Adult Grain-free

WETfor catsadult
Package
EAN4017721830805
PROTEIN
10.5%
FAT
8.5%
FIBRE
0.5%
ASH
2.1%
MOISTURE
76%
as-fed values from label·dry matter 24%·full DM → requires account
·3 main ingredients·5 EU additives
HOLOPET REVIEW · INDEPENDENT ANALYSIS·created 24 Jun 2026·grounded in product data

Holopet independently reviews the Animonda Carny Beef with Ostrich Adult Grain-Free, a wet food formulated for adult cats. Our evaluation examines its ingredient composition, additive profile, and overall nutritional quality to help consumers make an informed purchasing decision.

COMPOSITION · FROM LABELpublic

Composition from label scan

Declared: 68% · Gap: 32% (undisclosed by manufacturer)
#
INGREDIENT
SHARE
TIER
1
Beef (heart, meat, lung, liver, udder)
48%
B
HeartBeef Heart
A
MeatBeef Meat
A
LungBeef Lung
A
LiverBeef Liver
A
UdderBeef Udder
B
2
Ostrich (offals, meat)
20%
B
3
Minerals
C
TIER:
A
high quality — meat, organs, fish
B
acceptable — secondary cuts, dried
C
filler — minerals, low value
D
avoid — by-products

What you'll find in this food

We detect organs and tissues in the composition and explain their nutritional value. Universal biology — independent of the source animal species.

4 items

Liverorgan

Concentrated source of vitamin A, B12, copper, iron and folate. Natural multivitamin organ — even small amounts deliver micronutrients that supplemented mineral premixes struggle to match in bioavailability.

vit. Avit. B12ironcopper

Heartorgan

Natural source of taurine — critical amino acid for cardiac and visual health, especially in cats. Also rich in CoQ10 and B vitamins. Considered a muscle meat for protein composition purposes.

taurineCoQ10vit. B

Lungorgan

Lean organ — high protein, low fat. Easy to digest and cheap, but with lower nutritional density than liver or heart.

lean organprotein

Udderorgan

Secondary part — mostly connective tissue with moderate nutritional value. Classified as "by-product" in the EU — safe but low-value.

secondary part
Biological facts are universal — liver always provides vitamin A, regardless of whether it comes from beef, chicken or ostrich. Matching to your composition is automatic.
NUTRITIONAL VALUES

From label + dry-matter conversion

Manufacturer-declared values (% as-fed) + dry-matter math
From labelpublic
Protein
10.5%
from label
Fat
8.5%
from label
Crude fibre
0.5%
from label
Crude ash
2.1%
from label
Moisture
76%
from label
Energy
122 kcal/100g
derived
Taurine: 0.8 g/kg — essential for cats
Dry-matter values (DM)derived
Values after subtracting moisture — % of mass in dry matter. Show the full macro profile comparable between wet and dry food. NOTE: NFE here is % of mass. "Clinical indicators" shows % of kcal from carbs (different metric).

Clinical indicators

Thresholds for: cat · adult
⚠ Signals out of range: 1
CALORIC DISTRIBUTION

Where do the calories come from

Carnivores prefer protein + fat. High carb share = hint of lower-quality food.
31%
62%
Protein37 kcal (31%)Fat72 kcal (62%)Carbs8 kcal (7%)122 kcal / 100g
DIETARY ADDITIVESpublic

Vitamins and minerals added to the food

EU register codes · 5 additives · no preservatives
ADDITIVE ANALYSIS · HOLOPET REVIEW

Our additive analysis identifies five declared additives, and this product carries a clean-label status — no artificial preservatives, colorants, or flavors are present in the formulation. No controversial additives were identified in our scan. On the mineral side, the trace elements iodine, manganese, and zinc are each supplied in a single declared form: iodine as calcium iodate anhydrous, manganese as manganous sulphate monohydrate, and zinc as zinc sulphate monohydrate — all of which our scan classifies as standard inorganic salts, a conventional but lower-bioavailability tier compared to organic chelates. Among the additives our scan flagged as preferred forms are cholecalciferol (Vitamin D3), calcium iodate anhydrous, manganese sulfate monohydrate, and taurine, the last of which is an essential amino acid of particular importance in feline nutrition and is explicitly supplemented here.

We show what the manufacturer declared in the "Additives" section (supplementation). The natural contribution from ingredients is not computed — we don't know it.

Vitamins (1)
3a671
Vitamin D3
essential for cats
200 iu
Minerals (3)
3b202
Iodine (calcium iodate / potassium iodide compound)
essential for cats
0.75 mg
3b503
Manganese (manganous compound)
essential for cats
1.4 mg
3b605
Zinc (zinc compound)
essential for cats
25 mg
Amino acids (1)
3a370
Taurine
essential for cats
0.8 g
COMPLIANCE

FEDIAF compliance

We compare the guaranteed analysis on the label against FEDIAF minimum requirements for this species and life stage (per 1000 kcal of energy).
Meets key FEDIAF requirementsFEDIAF 2025 standard · cat · adult3 of 3 checked requirements met
ME: 122 kcal/100g — computed from macronutrients (FEDIAF 2025), as the manufacturer did not state it
Not stated on the label
CalciumPhosphorusSodiumPotassiumMagnesiumIodineEPA + DHA

The manufacturer did not include these in the guaranteed analysis. No declaration ≠ a deficiency — we simply don't know them.

We check only the guaranteed-analysis nutrients on the label, converted to per 1000 kcal. Vitamins and trace minerals from the "Additives" block are not counted here — the manufacturer declares the supplemented amount and the natural contribution from ingredients is unknown. This is not veterinary advice.

TRANSPARENCY

Recipe history

We track this recipe from the day it was added — future changes will appear here.
Stay on top of recipe changesWatch this product
  1. 6/24/2026Added to databasescore: A- 83 · reference point
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