Carnivores know that eating other carnivore carcasses transmits diseases

An international team of researchers led by the University of Granada (UGR) has explained for the first time the scientific basis of the old Spanish saying ‘perro no come perro’ (dog eats no dog): for a carnivorous animal, eating carrion of another carnivore, especially if it is of the same species, increases the probability of contracting pathogens that could endanger its life.