The NOBL "One Pagers"

"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." - Albert Einstein

Canine nutrition can be a pretty complex subject. At NOBL, we don't believe the answer is to "dumb it down" or sell you on "feel good stories". We also know that the vast majority of us don't have advanced degrees in pet care.

Our Mini-Library explains the issues, mechanics and provides insights to help in your decision making.

Before making any significant changes to your dog's routine, always check in with your veterinarian.

Nutrition

Manufacturing

Processing Steps by Format

How a pet food is made determines how much of the nutrition survives. Processing isn’t just a step, it’s the outcome.

Ingredients

Synthetics vs Whole Foods

Whole food ingredients deliver nutrients in forms the body recognizes and uses efficiently, with built-in cofactors.

Vitamins

Vitamins are fragile and easily lost during processing, which is why many foods rely on synthetic replacements after the fact.

Minerals

Bioavailability is what separates “on the label” from “in the body”. It measures how much of a nutrient is actually absorbed and used.

Bioavailability

Synthetics vs Whole Foods

Most health failures don't start with missing nutrients - they start with poor delivery and absorption.

Health Conditions

Dental

Good dental health starts with what pets eat, as certain foods with carbohydrates and ...

Allergies

Dogs can have several different types of allergies that present themselves in unique ...

Cognition

When it comes to cognitive health, regular visits to the veterinarian and feeding a quality...

Urinary

When it comes to urinary health, working closely with a veterinarian and feeding quality...

Diabetes

When a dog drinks more water, has increased urination, is experiencing weight loss, and...

Digestibility Studies

What They Are and Why They Matter

A digestibility study measures how well a dog can break down, absorb, and use the nutrients in a food.

While ingredient lists and guaranteed analyses show what goes into a formula, digestibility tells us what the body actually gets out of it.

In a typical study, dogs are fed a controlled amount of a specific food over a set period. Researchers then compare nutrient intake to nutrient output (via stool analysis) to calculate how much protein, fat, energy, and other nutrients were absorbed. The result is broken out as Dry Matter, Protein, Fat and Caloric Digestibility and are expressed as a percentage.

Why this matters for your dog:

More usable nutrition: Higher digestibility means your dog absorbs more of the nutrients needed for energy, muscle maintenance, immune support, and overall health.

Better stool quality: Efficient digestion often leads to smaller, firmer stools.

Reduced digestive upset: Dogs with sensitive stomachs benefit from highly digestible formulas.

Cost efficiency: Since your dog absorbs more nutrients, you may need to feed less to meet their nutritional needs.

Some brands make claims like “less waste,” or “smaller stools,” as signals of quality. While these outcomes can be linked to well-formulated foods, they are often presented without published digestibility data or controlled feeding trials to support them. Without a formal study, these statements are using marketing language that implies quality rather than verified nutritional performance that proves it.

 

True digestibility is measured through structured feeding studies and laboratory analysis, not visual observation or anecdotal feedback. For consumers, transparency around testing methods and results is an important distinction between evidence-based nutrition and marketing claims that rely primarily on perception.