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Digestive Systems

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Title: Digestive Systems Author: nmaxwell Last modified by: nmaxwell Created Date: 8/29/2003 3:03:36 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digestive Systems


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Digestive Systems
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Digestive Systems
  • Herbivore- an animal that feeds on plants
  • Omnivore- an animal which may feed on plants and
    animals
  • Carnivore- an animal which feeds on animals
  • Monogastric- an animal that has only one stomach
  • Ruminant- an animal which has a stomach divided
    into multiple compartments and uses regurgitation
    as part of its digestive strategy
  • Hindgut fermenter- non ruminant herbivore or
    omnivore in which digestion occurs in the caecum
    and large intestine
  • Avian- varies according to diet but has an organ
    to grind food

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Functions of the digestive system
  • Collection of food (eating).
  • Breaking down of food (digesting).
  • Absorption of usable materials (absorbing).
  • Disposal of wastes (defaecating)
  • Structure of the system will depend on the
    animals diet

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Mouth
  • Collecting food (eating) and preparing it for
    swallowing
  • Teeth- Breaking food off, and breaking it into
    swallowable lumps
  • Tongue -Moving food around mouth and mixing it
    with saliva.
  • The tongue has the taste buds which are important
    for food selection.
  • Salivary glands -Produce saliva, to lubricate
    food and start digestion

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Salivary Glands
  • The parotid gland located cranial to the ear and
    caudal to the cheek muscles
  • The sublingual gland under the tongue
  • The mandibular gland located at the angle of the
    jaw

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  • Saliva consists of a slippery secretion of water
    and mucus with some digestive enzymes.
  • The digestive enzyme is the starch digestive
    enzyme called ptyalin
  • The smell and sight of food causes the glands to
    produce saliva, which then mixes with the food
    making it slippery and easier to swallow
  • The enzymes also start the process of digestion.
  • Salivary glands are called exocrine glands
    because the substance they produce passes through
    a duct to the area where it work

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The Teeth
  • Incisors
  • These are the front teeth, usually flat and
    chisel shaped for cutting and stripping food (eg
    horses ).
  • Some animals use them for grooming (eg cats).
  • In some animals (rodents and lagomorphs) they
    grow continuously.
  • Canines
  • Usually sharp and pointed and used for catching
    and holding prey.
  • They are well developed in carnivores
  • Premolars
  • These are the first of the cheek teeth.
  • In herbivores they are modified as grinding teeth
    whereas in carnivores they are cutting and
    slicing teeth.
  • Molars
  • These are the rear cheek teeth and are the same
    as the premolars except there are no deciduous
    molars.

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Dental Formulas
  • There are two sets of teeth
  • temporary or deciduous teeth which are shed and
    replaced by the permanent teeth.
  • The number of each type of tooth varies according
    to the diet (eg ruminants do not have any canine
    teeth).
  • The number of teeth in any species can be
    expressed as a dental formula.
  • A dental formula counts the teeth in one side of
    the jaw from front to back, top and bottom.  

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The Ruminant Mouth
  • The tongue and lips are modified for collecting
    and tearing plant material such as grasses and
    branches,
  • The teeth are designed for grinding, and often
    continue growing throughout life.
  • There is often a gap, called a diastema between
    the incisors and the premolars, which allows the
    tongue to move the food around.
  • Some ruminants lack upper incisors, instead
    having a hard dental pad.
  • The salivary glands produce large quantities of
    saliva to help swallow hard fibrous food.

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Simple monogastric digestive system
  • No special modifications needed. 
  • These animals have a relatively simple diet.
  • These digestive systems are found in carnivores
    and omnivores who do not eat large amounts of
    plant matter and therefore do not need the
    special areas for micro-organisms to live in and
    ferment the plant matter.

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Hind and fore gut fermenters
  • The digestive system is modified to allow
    microbial fermentation of the herbivorous diet. 
  • The modifications are
  • the teeth, for grinding rather than tearing.
    canines may be absent or not functional.
  • the enlargement of the stomach or large
    intestine, caecum or colon which allows for
    longer passage of food. These areas also provide
    a place for the bacteria and protozoa that do the
    fermentation to live.
  • Most herbivores will eat their mother's faeces
    (coprophagy) when young to help them obtain the
    necessary bacteria and protozoa needed by the gut
    to digest plant matter.

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The Ruminant Digestive System
  • There are four parts to the stomach
  • The rumen or paunch is the largest section and
    occupies the left side of the abdomen. Its lining
    looks like carpet. This is where most of the
    microbial fermentation of the plant matter
    occurs.
  • The reticulum or honeycomb tripe is the most
    cranial stomach, and acts as a grinding and
    mixing organ. There is a groove called the
    oesophageal groove that allows food to pass
    directly from the oesophagus to the reticulum.
  • The omasum or bible (it looks like pages of a
    book) is the next stomach, which serves to
    squeeze water out of the contents.
  • The abomasum or true stomach is the equivalent of
    the monogastric stomach, containing acid and
    digestive juices.

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Oesophagus
  • Transfer food to stomach.
  • This is simply a muscular tube running from the
    back of the throat down through the chest and to
    the stomach.
  • The inner lining of epithelium secretes mucus to
    help keep the food sliding along and the muscles,
    around and along the oesophagus, contract
    rhythmically in waves called peristalsis to move
    food down into the stomach.

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Stomachs
Simple
Complex
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Stomach
  • Continue breaking down the food and mixing it
    with digestive enzymes and acid. some absorption.
  • The stomach stores food and is the next step in
    the actual digestion process.
  • It is a muscular sac with three parts
  • fundus
  • cardia
  • pylorus.
  • The stomach lies on the left hand side of the
    abdomen towards the midline (ie left medial).  
  • Water, glucose, salt and alcohol are absorbed
    directly through the stomach wall into the
    bloodstream
  • Of the digested food in the stomach starch and
    liquids pass rapidly from the stomach into the
    intestine. Protein moves slower and fat stays in
    the stomach the longest.
  • The passage of food into the small intestines
    under the control of the pyloric sphincter which
    is a ring of muscle around the opening of the
    stomach. The pasty mixed food at this stage is
    called chyme.

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Gastric Pits
  • The  stomach's muscular wall churns the food
    mixing it with the secretions produced by the
    exocrine gastric glands in the epithelial lining.
  • These secrete
  • hydrochloric acid which make the stomach contents
    acidic
  • the enzymes amylase (digests starch), pepsin
    (digests (protein), lipase (digests fat).
  • In young animals renin is also produced for the
    digestion of milk protein.

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Small Intestine
  • This is where most of the digestion and
    absorption takes place.
  • Breaking down the food continues by mixing with
    alkali, bile and enzymes.
  • It is divided into 3 parts
  • The duodenum
  • The jejunum 
  • The ileum

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Duodenum
  • This is where most of the digestion takes place.
  • The main organ that supplies the digestive
    enzymes is the pancreas and the juice from it
    contains the following enzymes
  • amylase  
  • lipase 
  • trypsin to digest protein
  • These empty into the duodenum through the
    pancreatic duct.
  • The bile duct also empties into the duodenum and
    bile (produced by the liver) is used to emulsify
    fat (break it down into smaller globules) which
    helps in its digestion. These secretions are
    alkaline and help to neutralise the acid from the
    stomach.

digestiveEndo2.swf
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Jejunum
  • The food is broken down into its simple parts and
    these are absorbed into the bloodstream in this
    part of the intestine.
  • The lining is thrown up into large villi (finger
    like projections that increase the surface area
    for absorption).
  • The digested protein and carbohydrates are
    absorbed into the bloodstream and the fats into
    the lacteals

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Ileum
  • This is the last part of the small intestine and
    the bile is absorbed here and transported back to
    the liver so it can be reused.

digestive.swf
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Pancreas
  • Produces digestive enzymes (as well as insulin).
  •   Each food group starts out as a large molecule
    made up of many small units joined together by
    chemical bonds. The enzymes function by breaking
    these bonds.
  • proteins are broken down to amino acids
  • carbohydrates (polysaccharides-literally many
    sugars) are broken down to monosaccharides (one
    sugar eg glucose)
  • fats are broken down to fatty acids and
    cholesterol.

CHOdige.swf
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The Liver
  • The liver is a large, multi-lobed organ, lying
    just caudal to the diaphragm. 
  • Produces digestive enzymes as well as bile.
  • After absorption, helps process the products of
    digestion.
  • Converting glucose from digestion, into glycogen
    to be stored until needed.
  • Making many important proteins (eg plasma
    proteins, or the proteins in the blood which help
    blood clot fight disease).
  • Breaking other proteins down to produce energy,
    and producing urea which is then removed by the
    kidneys.
  • Converting fatty acids from digestion into fats
    for storage.
  • Storage of glycogen, fats, fat-soluble vitamins
    and iron.
  • Detoxifying (getting rid of poisons). The liver
    is the main organ to get rid of poisons and drugs
    in the body.

liver.swf
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Large Intestine
  • Main site of water absorption, also manufacture
    of some vitamins
  • Some bacterial fermentation depending on
    species.

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Caecum
  • At the junction of the small and large intestines
    is a blind sac called the caecum. The size and
    importance of the caecum varies enormously
    between animals
  • In man it is called the appendix. It is only a
    small swelling and serves no purpose.
  • In horses it is huge and is used along with the
    colon for the fermentation of grass.

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  • The colon
  • The functions of the colon are to absorb water,
    water soluble vitamins, form the faeces and to
    secrete mucus and hind gut fermenters use their
    colon to ferment plant matter.
  • The rectum
  • This is the last part before the anus and is the
    last area of water absorption and the formation
    of pellets.
  • It also stores faeces prior to elimination.
  • The anus
  • Elimination of wastes (defaecation).
  • This is the exit and is controlled by the anal
    sphincter which helps prevent inappropriate
    defecation and the entry of dirt and
    micro-organisms.

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Avian Digestive System
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Diets for Different Species
Rats Meat insects cereals grains fruit
Mice Insects cereals grains nuts
Rabbits Grass fresh green vegetables carrots
Guinea pig Grass grains fruit
Dogs Dogs eat the whole carcass of animals they catch
Cats Will often leave stomach and fur from prey killed
Fowl Cereals grain seeded vegetable
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Time for a break
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