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Comparative Digestion Systems &Process

Comparative Digestion Systems &Process. Modified by Ashlee Gibson. The Digestion Process. Food is broken down Animals have digestive systems adapted to the foods that they consume Four types of digestive systems Ruminant(polygstric) Simple Stomach(monogastric) Avian

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Comparative Digestion Systems &Process

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  1. Comparative Digestion Systems &Process Modified by Ashlee Gibson

  2. The Digestion Process • Food is broken down • Animals have digestive systems adapted to the foods that they consume • Four types of digestive systems • Ruminant(polygstric) • Simple Stomach(monogastric) • Avian • Equine-modified simple stomach

  3. Ruminant Digestive System Modified to handle the breakdown of large amounts of fiber

  4. Ruminant Digestive System • Mouth • no upper incisors, hard palate • molars for grinding coarse vegetation • saliva does not contain enzymes • Esophagus • muscular tube connecting the mouth to the stomach

  5. Ruminant Digestive Systems The Four Compartmented Stomach • Rumen: storage area and fermentation vat • Reticulum: nails and wire may be found here-hardware stomach • Omasum: eliminates excess water from feed • Abomasum: true stomach, gastric juices and enzymes are secreted

  6. Ruminant Digestive Systems Stomach (cont.) • Regurgitation: first step in rumination • large quantities of roughage are consumed and are chewed just enough to swallow • after swallowing, regurgitation (“cud chewing”) takes place, food is re-chewed

  7. Ruminant Digestive System • Small Intestine • connects stomach to large intestine • food nutrients absorbed into blood • contains bile and pancreatic juices • pushes food through by muscle contractions

  8. Ruminant Digestive System • Large Intestine • Contains Cecum, Colon and Rectum • Cecum: sac at junction of small intestine and large intestine • Colon and rectum: at end of system • not as long as small intestine, but larger in diameter • water and some nutrient absorption occurs here • where residue solidifies before excretion

  9. Monogastric Digestive System Characterized by inability to digest roughage efficiently

  10. Monogastric Digestive System • Mouth • has upper and lower incisors • digestive enzymes secreted which breaks down nutrients • Esophagus • connects mouth to stomach

  11. Monogastric Digestive System • Stomach • secretes Hydrochloric Acid to break down nutrients • enzymes such as pepsin also secreted here • churning action mixes food • small and large intestine • function just as in ruminant systems

  12. Avian Digestive Systems Characterized by several organs not found in other species that are adapted for grinding hard or encased food

  13. Avian Digestive Systems • Mouth • no teeth which leads to the saying “scarce as a hen’s teeth!!” • Salivation excretion moistens food • Esophagus • has a modification called the “crop” which stores and moistens food • connects mouth and stomach

  14. Avian Digestive Systems • Stomach • Contains two parts • Proventriculus:same as monogastric stomach and provides digestive excretions • Gizzard: located after proventriculus, very muscular, used to grind food

  15. Avian Digestive Systems • Small Intestine • similar functions as in ruminants and monogastric systems • Large Intestine • similar functions as in ruminants and monogastric systems • “cloaca”: chamber into which urinary and genital canals open • “ceca”: aids in fiber digestion and absorption

  16. Equine Digestive Systems Characterized by non-ruminant animals that consume and digest feeds high in fiber

  17. Equine Digestive Systems • Mouth • intact top and bottom incisors • molars adapted to chewing fibrous feeds • no digestive enzymes in saliva • Esophagus • not well adapted for regurgitation • connects mouth and stomach

  18. Equine Digestive System • Stomach • similar to monogastric system • Small intestine • similar to monogastric and ruminant systems • no gall bladder to store bile • enlarged cecum to aid in fiber breakdown

  19. Equine Digestive System • Large Intestine • similar to monogastric systems • cecum (at junction of small and lare intestines) and colon take up most of the volume of the equine digestive system

  20. Accessory Organs Organs that aid in the digestive process without actually being part of the digestive system

  21. Accessory Organs • Pancreas • produces and secretes digestive enzymes • produces insulin which regulates carbohydrate metabolism • Liver • produces bile-breaks down fatty acids • stores iron, handles fats and carbohydrates in the blood

  22. The End!!

  23. References • Human Biology • http://ultranet.com/~jkimball/Biologypages/G/GITract.html

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