Real Science Exchange - Companion Animal

Pet Nutrition & Innovation with guest: Dr. Julia Pezzali, Kansas State University; William Henry, Extru-Tech, Inc. and Julianne Maze, Instinct Pet Food

49 min · 28 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Pet Nutrition & Innovation with guest: Dr. Julia Pezzali, Kansas State University; William Henry, Extru-Tech, Inc. and Julianne Maze, Instinct Pet Food

Descripción

Guests introduce themselves and their backgrounds. Dr. Pezzali’s nutritional priorities for cats are urinary health and obesity. William notes some of the important logistical considerations for APHIS export approval.  (4:09) Dr. Pezzali estimates that about 60% of cats in the US are obese. She notes her group is researching nutraceuticals that may increase energy expenditure in cats to help combat cat obesity. Dr. Altom chimes in to remind listeners that cats are not just small dogs and that their behavior is very different. The panel talks about whether or not pet owners are aware of their cat being obese, how to communicate with pet parents about this sensitive topic, secondary diseases that might occur due to obesity, and how food processing might impact obesity. (09:15) The panel discusses food additives for hairball prevention. Julianne hopes to conduct research in the future to assess if raw diets could help with hairball issues. (25:10) Julianne and William share some of their experiences with export approval from APHIS. USDA is short-staffed, so planning ahead and having complete and accurate paperwork is even more essential than ever. The panel notes  the importance of keeping up on changes in international regulations, working with co-manufacturers and ingredient suppliers, and understanding the impacts that delays could cause in the nutritional value of pet foods. (27:58) The panel talks more about urinary health, then touches on “indoor cat diets” and what that means, and upcoming trends in kibble production, particularly minimally processed products. (34:47) Panelists share their take-home thoughts. (43:53) Please subscribe and share with your industry friends to invite more people to join us at the Real Science Exchange - Companion Animal virtual pub table.   If you want one of our Real Science Exchange t-shirts, screenshot your rating, review, or subscription, and email a picture to anh.marketing@balchem.com. Include your size and mailing address, and we’ll mail you a shirt.

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16 episodios

episode Pet Food Collab: Student Showcase with guests Amelia Huebsch, Katelyn Bailey-Wisnieski, Larissa Koulicoff, and Dr. Julia Pezzali, Kansas State University artwork

Pet Food Collab: Student Showcase with guests Amelia Huebsch, Katelyn Bailey-Wisnieski, Larissa Koulicoff, and Dr. Julia Pezzali, Kansas State University

The guests introduce themselves and talk a little about their research. Amelia is a MS student, and Katelyn and Larissa are working on their PhDs in the pet food program at K-State. Katelyn is researching raw versus thermally processed diets, looking at nutrient losses, oxidative stress, inflammation and immunomarkers. Larissa had two main projects: one to evaluate dry bakery products as an ingredient in extruded dog diets, and the other used a pine oil rich in resin acids at two different levels. Both projects evaluated gut health. Amelia’s research is looking at betaine supplementation in cats. She has a preliminary trial complete and is working on developing an indirect calorimetry system for her next project. (2:25) Dr. Altom asks the students what they want to do after they graduate and what kind of work they’re interested in pursuing. He follows up with a question about how industry could be more involved or if there is something missing from the students’ programs that industry could provide. (11:59) Lastly, Dr. Altom asks what advice each student would give to a high school student or college freshman who has an interest in pets, knowing what they know now. (19:16) Please subscribe and share with your industry friends to invite more people to join us at the Real Science Exchange - Companion Animal virtual pub table.

Ayer28 min
episode Pet Nutrition & Innovation with guest: Dr. Julia Pezzali, Kansas State University; William Henry, Extru-Tech, Inc. and Julianne Maze, Instinct Pet Food artwork

Pet Nutrition & Innovation with guest: Dr. Julia Pezzali, Kansas State University; William Henry, Extru-Tech, Inc. and Julianne Maze, Instinct Pet Food

Guests introduce themselves and their backgrounds. Dr. Pezzali’s nutritional priorities for cats are urinary health and obesity. William notes some of the important logistical considerations for APHIS export approval.  (4:09) Dr. Pezzali estimates that about 60% of cats in the US are obese. She notes her group is researching nutraceuticals that may increase energy expenditure in cats to help combat cat obesity. Dr. Altom chimes in to remind listeners that cats are not just small dogs and that their behavior is very different. The panel talks about whether or not pet owners are aware of their cat being obese, how to communicate with pet parents about this sensitive topic, secondary diseases that might occur due to obesity, and how food processing might impact obesity. (09:15) The panel discusses food additives for hairball prevention. Julianne hopes to conduct research in the future to assess if raw diets could help with hairball issues. (25:10) Julianne and William share some of their experiences with export approval from APHIS. USDA is short-staffed, so planning ahead and having complete and accurate paperwork is even more essential than ever. The panel notes  the importance of keeping up on changes in international regulations, working with co-manufacturers and ingredient suppliers, and understanding the impacts that delays could cause in the nutritional value of pet foods. (27:58) The panel talks more about urinary health, then touches on “indoor cat diets” and what that means, and upcoming trends in kibble production, particularly minimally processed products. (34:47) Panelists share their take-home thoughts. (43:53) Please subscribe and share with your industry friends to invite more people to join us at the Real Science Exchange - Companion Animal virtual pub table.   If you want one of our Real Science Exchange t-shirts, screenshot your rating, review, or subscription, and email a picture to anh.marketing@balchem.com. Include your size and mailing address, and we’ll mail you a shirt.

28 de may de 202649 min
episode The Value of Academia & Industry Collaboration: How to Build Lasting, Impactful Connections for Mutual Support with Guests: Dr. Melissa Weber, Wilbur-Ellis Nutrition; Leah Lambrakis, Simmons Pet Food; Dr. Jane Schuh and Rachelle Banwart, KSU artwork

The Value of Academia & Industry Collaboration: How to Build Lasting, Impactful Connections for Mutual Support with Guests: Dr. Melissa Weber, Wilbur-Ellis Nutrition; Leah Lambrakis, Simmons Pet Food; Dr. Jane Schuh and Rachelle Banwart, KSU

Guests introduce themselves and their backgrounds (1:08) Rachelle gives an overview of what industry partnerships can look like at K-State. Dr. Schuh notes that one of the best ways to understand partner needs is for content experts from both entities to be talking to one another. She highlights some of the one-stop-shop resources that a land-grant university can provide. (8:30) Leah and Melissa give their perspectives as industry partners with K-State. Purposeful internships that meet a specific need, research collaboration with graduate students and faculty, hands-on learning, guest lectures, understanding university versus industry research, and university technical resources were highlighted. (13:47) Leah expands on the robust internship program at Simmons. The panel talks more about student engagement and how industry-academia partnerships have fostered networking and employee pipelines. (21:14) Dr. Weber commends the group at K-State for making partnerships easy to do. She notes that complicated agreements may sometimes discourage industry participants from partnering with universities, but that has not been the case for her company and K-State. Dr. Schuh and Rachelle talk about what partnership agreements can look like and what steps to take to inquire about partnership opportunities. The guests anticipate questions they might receive during their panel discussion at Pet Food Collab. (30:52) Panelists share their take-home thoughts. (45:20) Please subscribe and share with your industry friends to invite more people to join us at the Real Science Exchange - Companion Animal virtual pub table.   If you want one of our Real Science Exchange t-shirts, screenshot your rating, review, or subscription, and email a picture to anh.marketing@balchem.com. Include your size and mailing address, and we’ll mail you a shirt.

14 de may de 202650 min
episode From Concept to Bowl: Translating Vision Into a Successful New Product to Market with guests Leah Lambrakis, Simmons Pet Food and Dr. James Templeman, Primal Pet Foods artwork

From Concept to Bowl: Translating Vision Into a Successful New Product to Market with guests Leah Lambrakis, Simmons Pet Food and Dr. James Templeman, Primal Pet Foods

Leah gave a presentation titled “From Concept to Bowl: Translating Vision Into a Successful New Product to Market.” She describes the process at her company as a complex, highly collaborative technical process that requires cross-functional collaboration. Simmons uses a stage-gate new product development process, allowing all teams to co-own the initiative.  (5:45) The panel talks through different stages of taking a new product to market and what each entails. Ideation and market research to establish a need lead to product development. Depending on timelines, palatability testing could happen during product development, but may have to wait until scale-up, and there are trade-offs with each option. (6:57) Kim asks James and Leah to talk about their perspectives on nutritional needs and innovation in the senior pet space. They also talk about pet obesity and the importance of pet parent education on this topic. Leah mentions that a food log may be helpful in a multi-human household where many opportunities for feeding and treating may occur. (15:45) Leah talks more about the post-launch reflection, review, and commercialization stage, which focuses on analytical and process capability. Is the process consistently repeatable in all conditions? She also notes that at her company, they look back to expected launch volume and see how well the product is doing a year or two post-launch. James chimes in that the reflection stage is also a great way to evaluate each stage and gate to see if any improvements are needed in the entire process of getting a product to market. (30:18) The panel reflects on which stage each person finds most challenging in the process. They emphasize the importance of good communication and cross-functional teams. Lastly, they talk about common pitfalls and challenges both during and after the process of bringing a new product to market.  (33:25) Scott asks about the demographics of pet parents and how that plays into new product innovation. The panel shares about their pets. (48:22) Panelists share their take-home thoughts. (52:41) Please subscribe and share with your industry friends to invite more people to join us at the Real Science Exchange - Companion Animal virtual pub table.   If you want one of our Real Science Exchange t-shirts, screenshot your rating, review, or subscription, and email a picture to anh.marketing@balchem.com. Include your size and mailing address, and we’ll mail you a shirt.

23 de abr de 202656 min
episode Processing & Artificial Intelligence with guests Jay Pokorny, Extru-Tech, Inc.; Allison Blomme, Kansas State University; Scott Sutton, Muenster Pet artwork

Processing & Artificial Intelligence with guests Jay Pokorny, Extru-Tech, Inc.; Allison Blomme, Kansas State University; Scott Sutton, Muenster Pet

Allison gives some examples of how AI can be used in production facilities. Sensors on equipment, production schedules, product formulation, supply chain, logistics, and marketing were all mentioned. (11:24) The panel talks about challenges for small and mid-size companies when it comes to deploying AI. Jay discusses how a company can go about adding AI to its production system.  (16:45) Debbie details results from an online survey her group conducted about how many companies in the industry were using AI, and if not, what reasons they had for not using it. Scott and Jay share their perspectives about small and mid-size company barriers to deploying AI.  (25:13) The guests talk about AI hallucination and drift, and the best ways to manage around it. Jay talks about some of the efficiency and quality improvements that can be expected when adding AI to a production facility. The panel talks about flexible versus frozen scheduling and using ingredients that are perishable, such as meat products. (30:13) Panelists share their take-home thoughts. (47:03) Please subscribe and share with your industry friends to invite more people to join us at the Real Science Exchange - Companion Animal virtual pub table.   If you want one of our Real Science Exchange t-shirts, screenshot your rating, review, or subscription, and email a picture to anh.marketing@balchem.com. Include your size and mailing address, and we’ll mail you a shirt.

9 de abr de 202651 min