When I was writing an article on animal nutrition about 5 months ago, I called and talked to the nutritionists and food scientists at Iams about ethoxyquin in their food. The response was that they recognized that ethoxyquin was a sensitive issue with some pet issues because of rumors of cancer, so they were making efforts to make it "not appear" on their ingredient list. One way they can do this is to add the preservative to the packaging (although regulations require this fact to be labeled on human food packaging, it does not on animal feed). Another is to reduce the amount of the ingredient to a level where it does not have to be listed (even though it is still present, but in smaller amounts). A third option is to call it something else, or classify it with a group of other like preservatives (as in the case of mixed tocopherals). I do not know which option Iams chose, as they did not disclose this information, I just DO know that, technically speaking, ethoxyquin in some form is likely to be present in Iams food because (as they said) it is one of the best ways to keep fat from getting rancid. (Another way is vitamin C or ascorbic acid, which has a higher concentration in Iams now). This information is 5 months old, so I don't know how "out of date" that makes the information. - Erika Matulich and the Dirty Dozen [Posted in FML issue 2848]