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Project Summary

Difficulty  3 
Time required Average (about one week)
Prerequisites None
Material Availability Readily available
Cost Low ($20 - $50)
Safety No issues

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Abstract

Are you in charge of feeding your family pet? How much food do you think your pet eats compared to other kinds of pets? After adjusting for your pet's body weight, you might be surprised how it will compare to other kinds of pets. What type of pet do you think will eat the most for its body weight?

Objective

In this experiment you will compare the food intake of your family pets to find out which pet eats more for its body weight.

Introduction

Are you in charge of feeding your family pet? If so, then you know that your pet needs food! The need for food is something called a nutritional requirement. Food provides an animal with all of the nutrients it requires to survive: vitamins, minerals, protein, amino acids, sugars, and carbohydrates.

Do these sound familiar? That is because you need them too! After all, humans are animals, and we have nutritional requirements just like other animals do. It is interesting that different kinds, or species, of animals have different nutritional requirements. Different kinds of animals eat different kinds of foods, which provide different nutrients as part of their diet.

The amount of food that an animal eats can be due to many different factors, like: age, weight (body mass), diet (herbivore, carnivore, omnivore, insectivore), health (illness, obesity, pregnancy), activity level, or metabolism. In this experiment you will investigate which pets eat more than other pets by comparing the food intake of different species of pets. Food intake is how much food your pet eats, and can be measured by weighing the dry weight of your pet's food in grams and adjusting for body weight (body mass). Which pets in your experiment will eat the most?

pug eating -VS- lizard eating
Which species of pet will eat the most food for its size? (images courtesy of Tenderfoottraining.com and Chris Bennett, SFSU)

Terms, Concepts and Questions to Start Background Research

To do this type of experiment you should know what the following terms mean. Have an adult help you search the Internet, or take you to your local library to find out more!

Questions

Bibliography

Materials and Equipment

Experimental Procedure

  1. Prepare a daily log in a laboratory notebook to record your data. The data you will record each day will be the weight of food you feed your pets. Here is an example to help you design the data table in your log:

    Type of Pet Weight of Pet (g) Daily Weight of Food (g/day) Average Daily Weight of Food (g/day)
    Mon Tues Wed Th Fri Sat Sun
    Grover the Dog
    Rocky the Turtle
    Sneezy the Rat

  2. Weigh each pet and record the weight in kilograms (kg) in your log book. For smaller pets, you can weigh the pet on a small metric kitchen scale. For larger pets, you can hold the pet and take your weight together, then subtract the weight of yourself to get the weight of your pet. You may also be able to get your pet's weight from your veterinarian, which is important if your pet is a horse or the family cow and too big for you to pick up!
  3. Each day before you feed your pet, weigh the food in grams using a metric kitchen scale. Record the weight of the food in grams in your daily log. You will need to do this for one week.
  4. At the end of the week, calculate the average daily mass of the food your pet ate during the week. Do this calculation by adding together the weights of a weeks worth of food, and then dividing your answer by seven.
  5. Now you need to adjust (normalize) the amount of food each pet eats per day to take into account the body weight of that pet. This can best be expressed as the ratio of food weight in grams per kilogram of the pet's body weight (g/Kg of body weight). To calculate this ratio, first make yourself another data table:

    Type of Pet Average Daily Food Intake (g/day) Weight of Pet (kg) Food Intake (g/kg/day)
    Grover the Dog
    Rocky the Turtle
    Sneezy the Rat

  6. Divide the data in column two by the data in column three, and the answer will express the ratio of food weight (g) to pet weight (kg) and should be written into column four.
  7. Lastly, make a bar graph (histogram) of your data so that you can analyze it. Make a scale on the left side of the graph for the ratio you calculated, and draw a corresponding bar for each pet in your analysis. Are they the same or different? Do you notice any patterns?

Variations

Credits

This project was adapted from a student project submitted to the Marin County Science Fair in California.

Sara Agee, Ph.D., Science Buddies


Last edit date: 2007-09-17 23:00:00


Career Focus

If you like this project, you might enjoy exploring careers in Zoology.

Zoologist and Wildlife Biologist
Ever wondered what wild animals do all day, where a certain species lives, or how to make sure a species doesn't go extinct? Zoologists and wildlife biologists tackle all these questions. They study the behaviors and habitats of wild animals, while also working to maintain healthy populations, both in the wild and in captivity.
 



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