Title: AP Chapter 41
1AP Chapter 41
- Animal Nutrition
- Campbell 6e
2Nutritional Requirements
- Animals have 3 main dietary needs
- Fuel (chemical energy)
- Raw materials for biosynthesis
- Essential nutrients
3Homeostatic Mechanisms
- Animals must regulate their cellular fuel.
- The flow of food energy into and out of an animal
can be viewed as an energy budget. - ATP accounts for the largest fraction of the
energy budget of most animals.
4- ATP powers an animal at rest and during times of
activity. - ATP comes form the oxidation of organic fuel
molecules- carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins. - Carbohydrates are the preferred energy source
although they only contain about half as much
energy as lipids. - The storage and use of glucose is regulated so
the cellular fuel is used efficiently.
5Glucose Regulation
- When more calories are taken in than needed,
biosynthesis can occur. - If too many more are taken in than can be stored
in the liver as glycogen, then the excess is
converted to fat for long term-storage. - When fewer calories are taken in than needed, the
body will draw on its fat reserves for fuel.
6Caloric Imbalance
- If the energy budget is not in balance, then
under or over nourishment can occur. - If the body is undernourished, it will breakdown
its own proteins for fuel and this will
eventually result in death. - Overnourishment can also contribute to health
problems, namely obesity.
7Obesity
- Leptin is a hormone produced in adipose (fat)
tissue in mammals that regulates appetite and
muscular activity. This regulates the body weight
of an individual. - Obesity can be beneficial in some organisms (ex.
Petrels)
8Essential Nutrients
- The diet must supply the fuel necessary to make
ATP. - Animal diets must also supply the raw materials
needed for biosynthesis of proteins and other
organic compounds in the body. - There are essential nutrients that must be in the
diet because the body cannot manufacture them.
9- Some of these materials are needed by all
animals, but others are specific for certain
species (ex. Vitamin C). - If the diet is lacking in any of the essential
nutrients, then it is said to be malnourished.
10Classes of Essential Nutrients
- There are 4 classes of essential nutrients
- Essential amino acids
- Essential fatty acids
- Vitamins
- Minerals
11Essential Amino Acids
- Animals need 20 amino acids to synthesize
proteins. - Most animals can make about half of these amino
acids provided their diet contains the raw
materials. - The others, the essential a.a.s (8) must be taken
in through diet. - Protein deficiency results if these are not
consumed.
12- Protein deficiency is the most common form of
malnourishment in humans. Results in physical and
mental retardation. - Meat, eggs, and cheese are the best sources of
these essential a.a.s. - Proteins from animal products are complete
(provide all essential a.a.s in the correct
amounts). - Most plant proteins are incomplete (deficient
in one or more essential a.a.s).
13Essential Fatty Acids
- Most fatty acids can be synthesized in the body.
- The essential ones (some unsat. fats) must be
consumed. - Linoleic acid is an essential one that must be
consumed as it is needed for some of the
phospholipids in cell membranes. - Deficiencies of essential fatty acids are rare.
14Vitamins
- Organic molecules
- Needed in small quantities
- There are 13 essential vitamins for humans
- Two kinds of vitamins
- Fat-soluble
- Water-soluble
15Water-Soluble Vitamins
- B-complex and C
- Not stored in the body, must be replaced each
day. - The B-complex group is found in a variety of
foods cereal grains, meat, poultry, eggs, fish,
milk, legumes and fresh vegetables. - Citrus fruits are good sources of vitamin C.
16- Function as coenzymes in key metabolic processes.
- Needed for production of connective tissue.
- Excesses are eliminated in urine and mild
overdoses pose few problems.
17Fat-Soluble Vitamins
- (A, D, E and K). Unlike water-soluble vitamins
that need regular replacement in the body,
fat-soluble vitamins are stored in the liver and
fatty tissues, and are eliminated much more
slowly than water-soluble vitamins. - Variety of functions
- Can overdose on these vitamins.
18Vitamin A
- Vitamin A, also called retinol has these
functions - helps the eyes adjust to light changes,
- important role in bone growth, tooth development,
reproduction, cell division and gene expression. - Also, the skin, eyes and mucous membranes of the
mouth, nose, throat and lungs depend on vitamin A
to remain moist.
19Vitamin D
- Vitamin D functions
- plays a critical role in the bodys use of
calcium and phosphorous. It increases the amount
of calcium absorbed from the small intestine and
helps form and maintain bones. - Children especially need adequate amounts of
vitamin D to develop strong bones and healthy
teeth.
20Vitamin E
- Vitamin E acts as an antioxidant, protecting
vitamins A and C, red blood cells and essential
fatty acids from destruction.
21Vitamin K
- Naturally produced by the bacteria in the
intestines, vitamin K plays an essential role in
normal blood clotting and helps promote bone
health.
22Minerals
- Minerals are elements that originate in the Earth
and cannot be made by living systems. - Plants obtain minerals from the soil, and most of
the minerals in our diets come from directly from
plants or indirectly from animal sources.
23Minerals Continued
- Minerals are trace elements required for normal
metabolism, as components of cells and tissues,
and for nerve conduction and muscle contraction. - They can only be obtained from the diet.
- Iron for hemoglobin
- calcium (for bones)
- sodium nerve message transmission
24Food Types and Feeding Mechanisms
25Feeding Styles
- All animals eat other organisms --- dead or
alive, whole or by the piece. - Animals fit into 1 of 3 dietary categories.
- Herbivores
- Carnivores
- Omnivores
26Herbivores
- A herbivore is an animal that gets its energy
from eating plants, and only plants. - Many herbivores have special digestive systems
that let them digest all kinds of plants,
including grasses. - Herbivores need a lot of energy to stay alive.
Many of them, like cows and sheep, eat all day
long.
27Carnivores
- A carnivore is an animal that gets food from
killing and eating other animals. - Carnivores generally eat herbivores, but can eat
omnivores, and occasionally other carnivores. - Since carnivores have to hunt down and kill other
animals they require a large amount of calories. - This means that they have to eat many other
animals over the course of the year. The bigger
the carnivore, the more it has to eat.
28Omnivores
- An omnivore is a kind of animal that eats either
other animals or plants. - Some omnivores will hunt and eat their food,
eating herbivores and other omnivores. - Some others are scavengers and will eat dead
matter. - Omnivores eat plants, but not all kinds of
plants. Unlike herbivores, omnivores can't digest
some of the substances in grains.
29Feeding Adaptations
- There are 5 main ways animals ingest food.
- Suspension-feeders
- Substrate-feeders
- Fluid-feeders
- Bulk-feeders
- Absorptive
30Suspension Feeders
- Organisms such as sponges that feed by removing
food from water that filters through their body.
31Substrate Feeders
- Such as earthworms and termites, eat the material
(dirt or wood) they burrow through
32Fluid-Feeders
- such as aphids, pierce the body of a plant or
animal and withdraw fluids.
33Bulk Feeders
- Eat large pieces of food.
34Absorptive Feeders
- Absorptive feeders, such as tapeworms, live in a
digestive system of another animal and absorb
nutrients from that animal directly through their
body wall
35Digestion
36Digestion
- There are 4 main stages of food processing.
- Ingestion
- Digestion
- Absorption
- Elimination
37Ingestion
- Ingestion is the act of eating.
- Nearly all animals must do some sort of
processing to food that is in bulk form
38Digestion
- The second stage of food processing.
- Breaking down of food into small molecules that
the body can absorb. - These small molecules can then be used as raw
materials for biosynthesis. - Uses enzymatic hydrolysis (with H2O) to break
monomers into useable molecules.
39Absorption
- The cells of the digestive tract absorb the small
molecules that result from the digestive process. - Small molecules include glucose and other simple
sugars, amino acids.
40Elimination
- The undigested materials must pass out of the
digestive compartment.
41Types of Digestion
- Digestion occurs in specialized compartments.
- Two types of digestion
- Intracellular
- Extracellular
42Intracellular Digestion
- Some organisms use food vacuoles- small
organelles in the cell that contain digestive
enzymes. - This compartmentalizes the digestive process so
the organism does not digest its own tissues.
43Extracellular Digestion
- Digestion occurs outside of cells.
- Occurs within specialized compartments- a
digestive cavity. - Gastrovascular cavities are pouches that have one
opening- found in simple organisms like
Cniderians.
The mouth is the anus, too
44Digestive Tracts
- In higher organisms, such as mollusks,
arthropods, and echinoderms, the digestive tract
has 2 openings. - The digestive cavity is termed a digestive tract
or alimentary canal. - Food only moves in 1 direction.
45Earthworm Digestion
- Earthworms have a pharynx to suck food into the
mouth. - Food passes through the esophagus, is stored and
moistened in the crop and sand and gravel in the
gizzard grinds the food. - The intestine digests and absorbs the nutrients.
46Grasshopper Digestion
- A grasshopper has several digestive chambers
grouped into a foregut (with an esophagus and
crop), a midgut and a hindgut. - Food is moistened and stored in the crop, but
most digestion occurs in the hindgut. - The gastric ceca, pouches extending from the
midgut, absorb the nutrients.
47Avian Digestion
- Many birds have 3 chambers, the crop, stomach,
stomach and gizzard. - Chemical digestion and absorption of nutrients
occur in the intestine.
48Mammalian Digestion
- The mammalian digestive system consists of the
alimentary canal and accessory glands. - Peristalsis is the rhythmic waves of contraction
by smooth muscles in the walls of the canal. It
pushes food along the tract. - The system also has valves called sphincters.
49Digestive System Anatomy
- Digestive tract (mouth to anus)
- Alimentary tract or canal
- GI tract (stomach and intestines)
- Accessory organs
- Primarily glands
- Regions
- Mouth or oral cavity
- Pharynx
- Esophagus
- Stomach
- Small intestine
- Large intestine
- Anus
50Oral Cavity
- Mouth or oral cavity
- Tongue Involved in speech, taste, mastication,
swallowing. - Salivary glands
- Parotid
- Sublingual
- Submandibular
51Teeth
- Two sets
- Primary, deciduous, milk Childhood
- Permanent or secondary Adult (32)
- Types
- Incisors, canine, premolar and molars
52Teeth
53Salivary Glands
- Produce saliva
- Prevents bacterial infection
- Lubrication
- Contains salivary amylase
- Breaks down starch
- Mucous
- Secreted by the submandibular and sublingual
glands - lubricate
- Three pairs
- Parotid
- Submandibular
- Sublingual.
54Deglutition (Swallowing)
- Three phases
- Voluntary
- Bolus of food moved by tongue from oral cavity to
pharynx - Pharyngeal
- Reflex Upper esophageal sphincter relaxes,
elevated soft palate, which closes nasopharynx
and oropharynx. Pharynx elevates and opens the
esophagus, food pushed into esophagus - Esophageal
- Reflex Epiglottis is tipped posteriorly, larynx
elevated to prevent food from passing into larynx
55Pharynx
- Pharynx
- Nasopharynx
- Oropharynx Transmits food
- Laryngopharynx Transmits food
- Extends from oropharynx to esophagus and post. to
the larynx.
56Animations
- http//greenfield.fortunecity.com/rattler/46/upali
4.htm - http//hopkins-gi.org/multimedia/database/intro_25
0_Swallow.swf
57Esophagus
- Esophagus
- Transports food from pharynx to stomach
- Passes through esophageal hiatus (opening) of
diaphragm and ends at stomach - Sphincters
- Upper
- Lower
- Regulate movement of material into and out of the
esophagus
58Peristalsis
- http//www.lionden.com/peristalsis.htm
59Stomach
60Stomach Anatomy
- Openings
- Gastroesophageal or cardiac to fundus
- Pyloric to duodenum
- Regions
- Cardiac
- Fundus
- Body
- Pyloric
3
4
1
2
8
7
6
5
9
10
Located in the left superior abdomen
61Stomach Histology
- Rugae Folds in stomach when empty
- Gastric pits Openings for gastric glands
- Mucosa cells
- Endocrine regulatory hormones
- Chief - pepsinogen
- Parietal - hydrochloric acid
- Mucous neck - mucus
62(No Transcript)
63Movements in Stomach
Ingested food and stomach secretion mixed together
64Small Intestine
- Site of greatest amount of digestion and
absorption - Divisions
- Duodenum
- Jejunum
- Ileum Peyers patches or lymph nodules in mucosa
and submucosa where some absorption of nutrients
take place - Illeocecal sphincter junction between the ileum
and the large intestine
65Duodenum Anatomy and Histology
3
2
1
- Modifications
- The mucosa and submucosa form a series of folds
(Circular folds or plicae) - At the top of each fold are located villi which
are covered in microvilli - Lacteal capillary network
66Small Intestine Secretions
- Mucus
- Protects against digestive enzymes and stomach
acids - Digestive enzymes
- Disaccharidases Break down disaccharides to
monosaccharides - Peptidases Hydrolyze peptide bonds
- Nucleases Break down nucleic acids
- Duodenal glands (Brunner's glands)
- Stimulated by vagus nerve, secretin, chemical or
tactile irritation of duodenal mucosa
67Duodenum and Pancreas
68Pancreas
- Anatomy
- Endocrine
- Pancreatic islets produce insulin and glucagon
- Control blood levels of nutrients such as
glucose, amino acids - Exocrine
- Acini produce digestive enzymes
- Regions Head, body, tail
- Secretions
- Pancreatic juice (exocrine) produced in the
pancreas and delivered through the pancreatic
duct to the small intestine. - Trypsin
- Chymotrypsin
- Carboxypeptidase
- Pancreatic amylase
- Pancreatic lipases
- Enzymes that reduce DNA and ribonucleic acid
69Liver
- Lobes
- Major Left and right
- Minor Caudate and quadrate
- Ducts
- Common hepatic
- Transport bile out of the liver
- Cystic
- From gallbladder, joins CH duct to form common
bile duct - Common bile
- Joins pancreatic duct at hepatopancreatic ampulla
70- Hepatic cords
- Contain hepatocytes, the functional cell of the
liver - Bile production
- Storage
- Interconversion of nutrients
- Detoxification
- Phagocytosis
- Synthesis of blood
- Spaces btw the cords are sinusoids.
- Bile canaliculus lies btw the cells within each
cord
71Functions of the Liver
- Bile production
- Salts emulsify fats, contain pigments as
bilirubin (results from break down of hemoglobin) - No digestive enzymes but plays an important role
in digestion by neutralizing stomach acid making
it suitable for pancreatic enzymes - Storage
- Glycogen, fat, vitamins (A, B12, D, E, 7 K),
copper and iron - Nutrient interconversion
72- Detoxification
- Hepatocytes remove ammonia and convert to urea
- Phagocytosis
- Kupffer cells phagocytize worn-out and dying red
and white blood cells, some bacteria - Synthesis
- Albumins, fibrinogen, globulins, heparin,
clotting factors
73Duct System
74Gallbladder
- Cystic duct connects gallbladder to common bile
duct - Bile is stored and concentrated
- Dumps large amounts of concentrated bile into
small intestine - Production of gallstones possible
- Drastic dieting with rapid weight loss
75Large Intestine
4
5
3
1
6
2
- Extends from ileocecal junction to anus
- Consists of cecum, colon, rectum, anal canal
- Movements sluggish (18-24 hours)
76Large Intestine
- Cecum
- Blind sac, vermiform appendix attached (lymphatic
nodes) - Colon
- Ascending, transverse, descending, sigmoid
- Rectum
- Straight muscular tube
- Anal canal
- Internal anal sphincter (smooth muscle)
- External anal sphincter (skeletal muscle)
- Hemorrhoids Vein enlargement or inflammation
77Secretions of Large Intestine
- Mucus provides protection
- Parasympathetic stimulation increases rate of
goblet cell secretion - Pumps
- Exchange of bicarbonate ions for chloride ions
- Exchange of sodium ions for hydrogen ions
- Bacterial actions produce gases called flatus
78Digestion Animations
- http//www.constipationadvice.co.uk/understanding-
constipation/normal-digestive-system.html - http//health.howstuffworks.com/adam-200088.htm
79Digestion, Absorption, Transport
- Digestion
- Breakdown of food molecules for absorption into
circulation - Mechanical Breaks large food particles to small
- Chemical Breaking of covalent bonds by digestive
enzymes - Absorption and transport
- Molecules are moved out of digestive tract and
into circulation for distribution throughout body
80Functions
- Ingestion Introduction of food into stomach
- Mastication Chewing
- Propulsion
- Deglutition Swallowing
- Peristalsis Moves material through digestive
tract
1. Wave of circular smooth muscle relaxation
moves ahead of the bolus allowing the digestive
tract to expand 2. A wave of contraction of the
circular smooth muscle behind the bolus propels
it through the tract
81Reflexes in Colon and Rectum
82Digestive System Regulation
- Nervous regulation
- Involves enteric nervous system
- Types of neurons sensory, motor, interneurons
- Coordinates peristalsis and regulates local
reflexes
- Chemical regulation
- Production of hormones
- Gastrin, secretin
- Production of paracrine chemicals
- Histamine
- Help local reflexes in ENS control digestive
environments as pH levels