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Digestive System of Animals Animal Science Frameworks Presentation Unit 3.1

This presentation explores the digestive system of animals, including the purpose of digestion, mechanical and chemical breakdown of food, types of food animals ingest, and the anatomy of the monogastric and ruminant digestive tracts. It also discusses the enzymes involved in digestion and the differences between human and pig digestion.

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Digestive System of Animals Animal Science Frameworks Presentation Unit 3.1

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  1. Digestive System of Animals Animal Science Frameworks Presentation Unit 3.1 Mr. Sullivan

  2. Digestion Purpose: reduce feed particles to molecules that can be absorbed into the blood • Mechanical breakdown of food • chewing • Chemical breakdown of food • HCl in the stomach • enzymes • Contractions of digestive tract

  3. Animals are classified by the types of food they ingest • Carnivore - animal products • Dogs, Cats • Herbivore - plant products • Cattle, Sheep, Goats, Horses • Omnivore - combination of plant and animal products • humans, pigs

  4. Animals are also classified by the type of stomach they have • Monogastrics or non-ruminants • Ruminants

  5. Monogastric Animals Monogastric – one or simple stomach structure • mostly carnivores and omnivores • Very simple: mink and dog • Cecal digestion: horse, rabbit or rat • Sacculated stomach : kangaroo

  6. Ruminant Animals Ruminant - 4 compartment stomach with the compartments before the “true” stomach • herbivores • cattle, sheep, goats and pseudoruminants (llamas)

  7. Digestion • Prehension • Bringing the food to the mouth • Upper limbs, head, beak, claws, mouth, teeth and lips • Mastication or chewing • To crush the food, increase surface area and allow enzymes to act on molecules • Carnivores need only to reduce the size of the particle • Herbivores must chew continuously (40-50,000 times a day)

  8. Monogastric Animal Digestive Tract Basic anatomy mouth stomach small intestine large intestine or colon

  9. Monogastric Animal Digestive Tract • Feed passes from the mouth to the stomach through the esophagus • To reduce the size of the feed particles • From the stomach it passes through the • duodenum (first part of the small intestine) • Bile and pancreatic secretions enter here • jejunum (second part of the small intestine) • Absorption of nutrients • ileum (third part of the small intestine) • To split food molecules and absorb nutrients

  10. Monogastric Animal Digestive Tract • Large Intestine • water absorption • feces formation • Rectum

  11. Human and Pig Similarities • Both are omnivores • Cannot synthesize B complex vitamins • Cannot synthesize amino acids • Can become obese with increased food intake

  12. Monogastric Animal Digestive Tract • Exceptions • herbivores • horses have a cecum (blind anterior end of the colon) where feed is fermented • Cecum is posterior to optimum feed absorption area, thus advantages of the ruminant animal is lost

  13. Enzymes of the Digestive Tract Enzyme names often end in -ase and begin with a description of the substrate they act upon

  14. Enzymes of the Digestive Tract Enzyme Substrate Product Amylase Starch Dextrin, Disaccharides Chymotrypsin Peptides Amino Acid Peptides Lactase Lactose Glucose galactose

  15. Enzymes of the Digestive Tract Enzyme Substrate Product Lipase Lipids Fatty acids glycerides Pepsin Protein polypeptide Peptidase Peptides amino acid Sucrase Sucrose glucose Trypsin Protein polypeptide

  16. Monogastric Digestion • Enzymes help breakdown large molecules • Mouth • amylase in saliva of humans and pigs breaks down starch to disaccharides and dextrin • Stomach • HCl - creates acidic environment • pepsin - breaks proteins down polypeptides

  17. Monogastric Digestion • Enzymes help breakdown large molecules • duodenum • Cells release hormones that act on pancreas and gall bladder • secretin • pancreozymin • cholecystokinin

  18. Monogastric Digestion • pancreas • lipase • lipids to fatty acids and glycerides • trypsin • proteins to polypeptides • chymotrypsin • peptides to amino acids and peptides • amylase • starch to disaccharides and dextrin

  19. Monogastric Digestion • gall bladder • bile • produced in the liver • emulsifies fats • alkaline to neutralize stomach contents that are acidic • small intestine • amino acids, fatty acids and monosaccharides are available for absorption

  20. Ruminant Digestion • mouth • esophagus • rumen • reticulum • omasum • abomasum • small intestine • large intestine

  21. Ruminant Digestion • rumen - 40 gallons in a cow • large fermentation vat • covered with papillae to increase the surface area • microorganisms digest cellulose • microorganisms synthesize amino acids from nonprotein nitrogen • microorganisms synthesize B-complex vitamins

  22. Ruminant Digestion • reticulum - 2 gallons in a cow • lining looks like a honeycomb • interacts with rumen to mix contents

  23. Ruminant Digestion • omasum - 4 gallons in a cow • many folds, perhaps to grind feed

  24. Ruminant Digestion • abomasum - 4 gallons in a cow • true stomach

  25. Ruminant Digestion • Ruminants eat forage rapidly • they regurgitate food (cud) • and chew it again and swallowed • Rumination - continuous reguritation, chewing and swallowing • Eructation - elimination of gases (methane and carbon dioxide) in the rumen from fermentation

  26. Rumen Microorganisms • Bacteria and Protozoa • rumen environment is moist, warm, and provides a constant supply of nutrients • entire population of organisms depending on the kind and quality of the feed • when they are washed out of the omasum into the abomasum the acidic environment kills the microorganisms • provide amino acids and some energy

  27. Ruminant Digestion • Ruminants to not secrete amylase in their saliva • bacteria and protozoa in the rumen and reticulum utilize starches and sugars- no glucose available for the ruminant • microorganisms do produce volatile fatty acids (VFA) that are absorbed and converted to energy • acetic, propionic and butyric acids • major source of energy

  28. Energy Pathways in the Ruminant From Rumen to Abomasum Injestion materials Cellulose Starch Fat Complex Sugars Glucose VFAs

  29. Energy Pathways in the Ruminant Liver VFAs Glucose

  30. Ruminant and Monogastric Absorption in the small intestine • passive transport • diffusion by concentration • active transport • villi engulf molecules • to bloodstream or lymph system

  31. Rumen Microorganisms • Bacteria and Protozoa • rumen environment is moist, warm, and provides a constant supply of nutrients • entire population of organisms depending on the kind and quality of the feed • when they are washed out of the omasum into the abomasum the acidic environment kills the microorganisms • provide amino acids and some energy

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