Hermes
Teenage Guinea Pig
I don't use vitamin/mineral supplements for my guinea pigs, I do however use them for my rats as a sort of cover-all as they have a homemade diet (this is common practice in the rat community).
I'm just wondering why for guinea pigs vitamin C supplements added to water are considered to be innapropriate/ineffective/possibly even dangerous, based on what I've read on here. The two main arguments I've come across are that it evaporates or that it makes the guinea pigs less likely to drink the water.
Vitamin C is unstable in solution but it doesn't evaporate, it oxidises when exposed to heat, light and air. The rate of oxidation obviously varies in accordance with the above parameters but given the necessary regularity of water changes this would be almost negligible.
I can understand it being an issue if they don't want to drink it - obviously they're not going to gain the benefit of it. But that doesn't automatically mean it shouldn't be tried. My rats go nuts for their supplement. If there's a concern about not drinking enough water then two bottles can easily be supplied - I put the vitamin supplement in a mouse water bottle and have large bottles for plain water - and intake can be monitored.
The only real argument I can see is not being able to monitor dosage precisely, particularly with multiple guineas and the fact that it's unnecessary anyway given a suitable diet of hay, veg and pellets.
I'm not making a case for the use of vitamin drops, I'm questioning the misinformation - where did it come from?
I'm just wondering why for guinea pigs vitamin C supplements added to water are considered to be innapropriate/ineffective/possibly even dangerous, based on what I've read on here. The two main arguments I've come across are that it evaporates or that it makes the guinea pigs less likely to drink the water.
Vitamin C is unstable in solution but it doesn't evaporate, it oxidises when exposed to heat, light and air. The rate of oxidation obviously varies in accordance with the above parameters but given the necessary regularity of water changes this would be almost negligible.
I can understand it being an issue if they don't want to drink it - obviously they're not going to gain the benefit of it. But that doesn't automatically mean it shouldn't be tried. My rats go nuts for their supplement. If there's a concern about not drinking enough water then two bottles can easily be supplied - I put the vitamin supplement in a mouse water bottle and have large bottles for plain water - and intake can be monitored.
The only real argument I can see is not being able to monitor dosage precisely, particularly with multiple guineas and the fact that it's unnecessary anyway given a suitable diet of hay, veg and pellets.
I'm not making a case for the use of vitamin drops, I'm questioning the misinformation - where did it come from?