Updated
Cat food safety
Can Cats Eat Mulberry Leaves? Tiny Clean Leaf Only
Tiny clean leaf only
A tiny clean mulberry leaf is usually a low-value nibble, but cats do not need it.
Mulberry LeavesAsk your vet
Call your veterinarian if the plant identity is uncertain, pesticides may be involved, a large amount was eaten, or symptoms start.
Identify the leaf first
A safe answer depends on knowing the plant. Unknown outdoor leaves should not be treated like food.
Plants are not enrichment food
A nibble is different from letting a cat graze on leaves. Keep the normal diet complete and predictable.
How to offer it
- Confirm the plant is mulberry, choose a clean untreated leaf, wash it, and offer only a tiny torn piece.
- Remove stems or tough pieces that could make chewing or swallowing harder.
Avoid
- Unknown leaves, pesticide-treated leaves, roadside plants, wilted or moldy leaves, yard clippings, and leaves from mixed bouquets or houseplants.
- Mulberry leaves for kittens, cats that vomit plant material, cats with digestive disease, or cats on prescription diets unless your veterinarian approves it.
Watch
- Vomiting, diarrhea, drooling, gagging, coughing, refusing food, or repeated plant chewing.
Portion
One tiny torn piece is enough. Do not offer a pile of leaves or make plant chewing routine.
Helpful food-safety supplies
Optional tools for measuring, storing, serving, and cleaning up tiny portions safely.
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