Title: The great Serengeti migration: A quest for minerals
1The great Serengeti migration A quest for
minerals
2Digestive system
3Organs of alimentary canal
Figure 23.2
4MonthEsophagusStomachSmall intestineLarge
intestineAccessory organsSalivary glands,
liver, pancreas, gall bladder
Figure 23.1
5Digestive tracts of various vertebrates
6Digestive tracts of invertebrates and vertebrates
7Figure 4.1 The composition of the adult human
body
8Nutrition
- Proteins
- Lipids
- Carbohydrates
- Vitamins and minerals
9Figure 4.2 Amino acid chemistry (Part 1)
10Figure 4.2 Amino acid chemistry (Part 2)
11Figure 4.3 Fatty acids and triacylglycerols
(Part 1)
12Figure 4.3 Fatty acids and triacylglycerols
(Part 2)
13Figure 4.4 Carbohydrate chemistry
14Figure 4.5 Vitamin structures
15Feeding
- Examples of feeding adaptations
- Food chains
16Figure 4.6 Some species feed by targeting and
subduing individual food items (Part 1)
17Figure 4.7 Specialization of a vertebrate
feeding apparatus
18Dentition
19Figure 4.8 Specialization of an invertebrate
feeding apparatus (Part 1)
20Figure 4.8 Specialization of an invertebrate
feeding apparatus (Part 2)
21Figure 4.10 The feeding apparatus of a baleen
whale
22Figure 4.12 Reef-building corals of warm waters
need light because they are symbiotic with algae
(2)
23Figure 4.9 Short food chains deplete energy less
than long food chains do
24Digestive systems of insects and crustaceans
- Crustaceans digestive system is separate from
the excretory system - Insects the Malpighian tubules excretory
system is connected at the junction of the midgut
and hindgut
25Figure 4.16 The digestive systems of two types
of arthropods insects and crustaceans
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27Figure 23.1
28Stomach (continued)
- Contractions of the stomach churn chyme.
- Mix chyme with gastric secretions.
- Push food into intestine.
Insert fig. 18.5
29Small Intestine
- Each villus is a fold in the mucosa.
- Covered with columnar epithelial cells
interspersed with goblet cells. - Epithelial cells at the tips of villi are
exfoliated and replaced by mitosis in crypt of
Lieberkuhn. - Lamina propria contain lymphocytes, capillaries,
and central lacteal.
Insert fig. 18.12
30Histology of the Alimentary Canal
Figure 23.6
31Sensors of the GI tract regulatory mechanisms
- Mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors involved
- Located in the walls of the tract organs
- Sensors respond to
- Stretching
- Osmolarity
- pH
- Presence of substrates and end-products
32Regulatory mechanisms (2)
- Receptors initiate reflexes
- Activate of inhibit glands that secrete digestive
juices - Stimulate smooth muscle of GI tract
- Move food along the tract
- Mix lumen content
33Peristalsis and Segmentation
Figure 23.3
34Adaptation associated with animals diet
- Microbe-assisted digestion animals in
hydrothermal vents-trophosomes - Dentition/mouth parts
- Length of digestive tract
- Herbivores
- Carnivores
- Omnivores
- Sharks
- Birds
35Microbe-dependent digestion
- Digestion assisted by microbes
36Animals maintain symbiosis with three categories
of microbes
- Heterotrophic microbes
- Organic compounds of external origin
- Autotrophic microbes
- Synthesize organic molecules from inorganic
precursors - Chemosynthetic
- Photosynthetic
37Figure 4.13 Hydrothermal-vent worms are
symbiotic with chemoautotrophic bacteria (Part 1)
38Hydrothermal-vent worms
- Symbiotic with chemoautotrophic bacteria-
trophosomes - Worms have not mouth, gut, or anus
- Food comes from sulfur-oxidizing chemoautotrophic
bacteria - Organic molecules from bacteria meets nutritional
needs - Vents- source of H2S
39Hydrothermal-vent worms
- Symbiotic with chemoautotrophic bacteria-
trophosomes - Worms have not mouth, gut, or anus
- Food comes from sulfur-oxidizing chemoautotrophic
bacteria - Organic molecules from bacteria meets nutritional
needs - Vents- source of H2S
40Figure 4.13 Hydrothermal-vent worms are
symbiotic with chemoautotrophic bacteria (Part 2)
41Comparison of the digestive tracts of carnivores
and herbivores
- Carnivores- foregut digestion
- Herbivores
- Hindgut
- Foregut
42Figure 4.14 The digestive tract of ruminants
(Part 1)
43Stomach of ruminants
- Several chambers
- Rumen first chamber/fermentation occurs
- Regurgitate fermenting materials from the rumen
into mouth - Further grinding and reswallow
- From rumen ?reticulum ?omasum ?abomasum (true
stomach)
44Functions of microbes in ruminants
- Synthesize B vitamins, essential amino acids
- Fermentative breakdown of compounds that animals
cannot digest cellulose - Recycle waste nitrogen from animal metabolism
- Make ammonia so other microbes can use it as
nitrogen source
45Figure 4.14 The digestive tract of ruminants
(Part 2)
46Figure 4.15 The digestive tracts of two hindgut
fermenters
47Hind and midgut fermenters
- Enlarged cecum/colon
- Rabbits, horses, zebras, rhinos, apes, elephants
- Break down of cellulose and carbohydrates
- Forms short-chain fatty acid
- B vitamins- not utilized, lost in feces
- Coprophagy rabbits eat special soft feces
48A comparison of the digestive tracts of a
carnivore (coyote) and a herbivore (koala)
49Digestion and absorption
- Digestive enzymes in 3 spatial contexts
- Intraluminal enzymes
- Membrane-associated enzymes
- Intracellular enzymes
50Intracellular and extracellular digestion
- Intraluminal and membrane-associated enzymes are
responsible for extracellular digestion - Intracellular enzymes are responsible for
intracellular digestion - Advantages and disadvantages of intra- and
extracellular digestions?
51Figure 4.17 The stomach of a clam (Part 2)
52 Carbohydrate digestion
53Figure 4.19 Absorption of monosaccharides in the
vertebrate midgut (Part 2)
54 Protein digestion
55Figure 4.18 The digestion of a short protein by
three pancreatic peptidases
56 Fat digestion
57Chemical Digestion Fats
Figure 23.35
58Figure 4.19 Absorption of monosaccharides in the
vertebrate midgut (Part 1)
59Chemical Digestion Carbohydrates
- Carbohydrates absorption via cotransport with
Na, and facilitated diffusion - Enter the capillary bed in the villi
- Transported to the liver via the hepatic portal
vein
60Chemical Digestion Proteins
- Absorption similar to carbohydrates
- Enzymes used pepsin in the stomach
- Enzymes acting in the small intestine
61Chemical Digestion Fats
- Absorption Diffusion into intestinal cells where
they - Combine with proteins and extrude chylomicrons
- Enter lacteals and are transported to systemic
circulation via lymph
62Coordination of digestion neural and endocrine
control
- Controls of digestive activity
- Extrinsic
- Central nervous system and autonomic nervous
system - Intrinsic
- Hormone-producing cells in stomach and small
intestine - Distributed via blood and interstitial fluid to
target cells
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64Endocrine control
- Endocrine control
- Gastrin
- Secretin
- CCK
- GIP
- Where?
- When?
- Why?
- How?
65Figure 4.20 GI function after a meal is
coordinated in part by hormones secreted by cells
in the gut