Title: Digestion and Nutrition
1Digestion and Nutrition
- Comparing digestive tracts
2Heterotrophs Eat Preformed Foods
- The energy needed for routine metabolism
- The components to repair tissue or grow
- Carbohydrates - Amino acids
- Proteins - Nucleic acids
- Lipids
- Digestive system is an adaptation to a particular
food source.
3A Gut is Complete or Incomplete
- Planarian/ Tapeworm
- Incomplete gut
- Contains only mouth, a pharynx intestine.
- Gastrovascular cavity is a sac with digestive
enzymes. - No specialized cells
4Earthworm Complete Gut
- System is a tube with a mouth and an anus.
- Different regions of tube have specialized
functions. - Digestion in intestines.
- Surface area increased by intestinal folds.
- Undigested passed out anus.
5Feeding can be continuous
- Called a filter feeder
- Constantly moving water carries in food.
- Cilia move food to mouth and stomach.
- Enzymes aid amoeboid cells in tract to complete
digestion.
6Feeding can be Discontinuous
- Mouth with jaws, teeth, and tongue.
- Esophagus leads to stomach.
- Requires storage area in gut due to occasional
large consumption of food.
7Dentition Digestive Tract are Suitable to Diet
- Herbivores have teeth for crushing and grinding
and long specialized digestive tract. - Carnivores have pointed incisors and canine teeth
to tear off pieces small enough to swallow have
shorter digestive tract. - Omnivores, including humans, have teeth for
vegetable diet and a meat diet. - Incisors (shearing) - Canines (tearing)
- Premolars and molars (grinding)
8Humans Have a Complete Tract
- Functions of human digestion
- Ingestion receiving food and drink.
- Digestion mechanical chemical processes to
break down food. - Absorption nutrients from small intestine
diffuse into cardiovascular lymphatic systems. - Elimination indigestible waste removed
9Each part of digestive system has a specific
function
10Mouth Receives Food
- Mechanical digestion using teeth and tongue.
- Chemical digestion
- Three pairs of salivary glands
- Secrete salivary amylase, an enzyme to digest
starch - Taste buds primarily on tongue, but also surface
of mouth and pharynx. - Food chewed and mixed with saliva.
- Tongue pushes food back to pharynx.
11Esophagus Conducts Food
- Esophagus and trachea (respiratory) joined in
pharynx and then separate. - Epiglottis covers opening to trachea.
- Muscles move bolus (food) through pharynx into
esophagus. - Esophagus is muscular tube that moves food to
stomach by peristalsis. - Peristalsis a series of contracting and
relaxing muscle movements along a tube.
12Stomach Stores Food for discontinuous feeding
- Walls contract to mix food with secreted gastric
juices from gastric glands - HCl lowers pH to 2 to stop amylase and promote
pepsin enzyme. - Pepsin produces peptides
- Mucous secretions for protection of stomach
13Structure of stomach
- Muscular outer wall.
- Epithelial walls dotted with gastric glands
- Gastric glands have 3 cell types
- Mucous cells protect stomach lining
- Chief cells that secrete pepsinogen
- Parietal cells that secrete HCl.
- Pyloric sphincter controls entry of chyme to
duodenum.
14Small Intestine Absorbs Nutrients
- 4.5 meter muscular tube
- 3 sections
- Duodenum 25cm
- Receives chyme
- Digestive enzymes bi-
- Carbonate from pancreas
- Bile from liver gallbladder.
- 2. Jejunum
- 3. Ileum
15Small intestine specialized for absorption of
nutrients
- Surface of mucous membrane lining covered by
ridges called VILLI. - Microvilli are plasma membrane extensions of the
villi. - Increase surface area for absorption.
16Inside a Villi
- Contains blood vessels
- Sugar, amino acids, water into blood.
- Contains lymphatic vessel called lacteal.
- Lipids into lymph.
- Absorption involves ACTIVE TRANSPORT.
17Control of Digestive Juices
- Secretin produced in duodenal wall stimulates
pancreas to secrete bicarbonate. - Cholecystokinin (CCK) produced by duodenal wall
to receive pancreatic juices bile - Gastric Inhibitory Peptide produced by duodenal
wall to stop action of gastrin. - Gastrin produced by gastric glands increases
mixing and secretion of enzymes.
18Two Accessory Organs
Pancreas
Liver
19Pancreatic Secretions
- Secretes pancreatic juice containing digestive
enzymes and buffers into the duodenum by way of
ducts (Exocrine). - Secretes glucogon and the hormone, insulin, into
the bloodstream (Endocrine).
20Liver is a Glandular Organ
- Large small intestines form hepatic portal vein
leading to the liver. - Numerous functions
- Detoxifies the plasma.
- Makes plasma protein.
- Destroys old blood cells to make bile.
- Produces bile to emulsify lipids.
- Stores glucose as glycogen breaks down for
blood. - Produces urea from amino groups ammonia.
21Large intestine absorbs water
- Follows small intestine
- Has four parts
- Cecum with appendix
- Colon
- Rectum last 20 cm.
- Anal canal ends at anus
- Feces is 75 water 25 solid matter
22Nutrition Affects Health
- Balanced diet includes all essential nutrients
carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, vitamins and
minerals. - Vitamins are required for metabolic processes.
- Minerals are required for structure and function
of specialized cells. - Example hemoglobin requires Iron.