At the risk of being accused of beating a dead horse, I am willing to risk vilification, as I appreciate science more and accurate info is always better, imo.
Here's a link that explains the absorption percentage of iron that is eaten through the normal gi.
http://veterinarymedicine.dvm360.com/vetmed/Toxicology+Brief/Toxicology-Brief-The-toxicity-of-iron-an-essential/ArticleStandard/Article/detail/306534
Here's a quote from that article.
"Toxicity
Since no mechanism exists for excreting iron, toxicity depends on the amount of iron already in the body. Consequently, some animals develop clinical signs of toxicosis even when they receive doses that cause no problems in other animals. Iron is most toxic when given intravenously. Intramuscular injections are less toxic, and iron given orally is the least toxic, probably because the amount of iron absorbed orally is not 100% of the dose ingested.4 When assessing the potential toxicity of an iron overdose, the amount of elemental iron in the products ingested must be determined (Table 1).4 For example, if a 500-mg tablet of ferrous gluconate was ingested, only 60 mg of elemental iron would have been ingested (500 mg X 0.12).
No clinical signs of toxicosis are expected in dogs ingesting less than 20 mg/kg of elemental iron. Dogs ingesting between 20 and 60 mg/kg of elemental iron can develop mild clinical signs. When the amount of elemental iron ingested is greater than 60 mg/kg, serious clinical signs can develop.2 In all animals, oral doses between 100 and 200 mg/kg are potentially lethal.2,4"
In other words, most supplemental iron as added in dog food has about a 12 percent absorption ratio, far lower than even the hypothetical numbers I suggested in another thread. In that other thread, I had supposed 60 percent bioavailability, which was wrong. According to this article, it is 12 percent. Now, in a bag that has 80 mg per kg added before cooking and assuming all 80 mg made it through the process, that means there should ideally be 22.08 mg in a serving of .276 kg (the size serving my dog normally eats. Yes, I made a math mistake earlier, using a wrong conversion factor). At 12 percent for oral doses, that means he is absorbing 2.6 mg, if he was eating Evo, which is listing iron at 80 mg/kg, rather than the food he eats, which lists ferrous sulfate (a salt) at a trace amount. A 60 mg dose can cause symptoms in dogs if ingested at one meal. At 12 percent absorption, a dog, to receive a 60 mg dose of iron in one meal, would have to eat 6.25 kg (13.75 lbs). 60 is 12 percent of 500 mg, at 80mg/kg is 6.25 kg of food. Lbs = kg*2.2. My dog has never eaten over half a 20 lb bag at one time and I don't know of many dogs that have the stomach room to take on more than a quarter to half a pound of food, let alone 13 3/4 lbs of food at one sitting. In fact, you only find a stomach that large in the largest of the wild canids, the north american Gray Wolf, which has a stomach that can distend and hold up to 20 pounds of food. One of the major differences between dogs and wolves is the size of the stomach, with dogs having smaller stomachs. Some Labs will clean their bowl. .9 kg * 80 mg = 8.64 mg in that bowl full, still less than 20, still less than 40.
Shadow masses 29.5 kg. That raised to .75 = 12 kg. 20 mg is a general figure. But 10.4 is certainly less than 20. 2.6 mg is way less than 20 mg and is way, way less than 40 mg.
Also, dogs are not fed elemental iron in commercial food. It is chelated. One might have to get a superstrong iron supplement in order to get elemental iron. Chelating affects how the dog can absorb iron. No one just feeds the dog pure iron filings.
I likes me some math.
Also, different iron chelates absorb differently. Salts are generally water soluble, making it easier to excrete excess.
I'm not on the AAFCO panel but I am sure they have access to this info, as well, and reflect it in their guidelines. Their guidelines are for pre-process amounts based on the bioavailability of real world ingredients, rather than pure elemental isotopes. Also, not a lot of dogs eat over two pounds of food at one meal. Their stomachs won't necessarily hold that much kibble. I once fed Shadow a 6ounce steak and that was enough for him for a while. I'm just an electrician with Google for a home page and I found it.
So, while it is good that we pay attention to the food we buy, we should certainly think and research carefully. Not that we need to reinvent the wheel but knowledge is power.