1 / 21

Today’s Objectives

Today’s Objectives. Define a digestive system and what it does Identify parts of the digestive system and their functions Difference between a Ruminant vs. Non-Ruminant vs. Hind-gut Fermenter

randilyn
Télécharger la présentation

Today’s Objectives

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Today’s Objectives • Define a digestive system and what it does • Identify parts of the digestive system and their functions • Difference between a Ruminant vs. Non-Ruminant vs. Hind-gut Fermenter • Identify the difference indigestive systems between Ruminant vs. Non-Ruminant vs. Hind-gut Fermenter • Identify parts of the digestive system in a Ruminant vs. Non-Ruminant

  2. Digestive System-What is it? • Consists of parts of the body involved in chewing and digesting food • Moves the digested feed through the animal’s body and absorbs the products of digestion

  3. Parts of the digestive System • Mouth-where the food enters the animals body • Esophagus-tube like passage from the mouth to the stomach • Stomach-receives the feed and adds chemicals that help in the digestive process

  4. Parts of the digestive system • Small Intestine- small tube that splits food molecules and absorbs nutrients • Large Intestine-larger in diameter and ends with the rectum • Rectum-end of GI tract, place where feces exits body

  5. Digestive System Ruminant vs. Non-Ruminant vs. Hind-gut Fermenter

  6. Digestion in Ruminants

  7. What is a Ruminant? • Animals with more then one stomach • Chew their cud • Cows have 4 Compartment stomachs • Reticulum • Rumen • Omasum • Abomasum

  8. Cattle Digestive System

  9. Reticulum • Honeycomb lining • Collects hardware (nails, wires, etc.) • Stores, sorts, and moves feed back to the esophagus for regurgitation

  10. Rumen • Papillae lining • Functions as a storage vat • Food is soaked, mixed, and fermented • Some breakdown of feed through microbial action • Absorption of some nutrients

  11. Omasum • AKA: Many plies • Laminae lining (many folds) • Reduces particle size • Grinds Roughage • Absorption of water

  12. Abomasum • Only “true” stomach • Feed is mixed with gastric juices • Decrease pH from 6 to 2.5 • Denatures protein • Kills bacteria and Pathogens • Dissolves minerals

  13. Digestion in Non-Ruminants

  14. Swine Digestive System

  15. Non-Ruminants • Monogastric System • Has only one compartment to the stomach • Process goes through the • Esophagus • Stomach • Small intestine- duodenum, jejunum, ileum • Large intestine: cecum (appendix in humans), colon, rectum

  16. Hind-gut Fermenter • Enlarged Cecum • Acts as a rumen in ruminants • Not as efficient as rumen • Roughage feeds are digested by bacterial action • Animal eats less, but more often than ruminants • Animal is able to utilize roughages unlike non-ruminants

  17. How digestion works • Feed passes from mouth to esophagus then to stomach • Partly digested food leaves stomach enters into small intestine • Splitting of foods molecules and absorption of nutrients • Stomach empties contents into small intestine known as the duodenum-jejunum-ileum

  18. How digestion works • Small intestine to Large intestine • Colon prevents material in large intestine from moving back to small intestine • Cecum-(blind gut) does little for most animals except horses-roughage feeds digested by bacterial action

  19. How Digestion Works • Large Intestine-absorbs water and nutrients that is not absorbed by the small intestine • Material that is not digested and absorbed in small intestine passes to large intestine • Adds mucus to enable the material to pass through easily • Empties into the rectum

  20. In Conclusion • Ruminants and Non-Ruminants have different digestive systems • Why is the digestive system important? • How many stomachs does a Ruminant have? Non-Ruminant? • What makes a Horse different then other animals? • Category

More Related