11 Animal Nutrition
11 Animal Nutrition
11 Animal Nutrition
Nutrition
GBIO 80: General Physiology
Laboratory
Instructor: John Paul Macaraig
Credits: Najeen Rula
Timeframe: 1 week
8
Thru mechanical and chemical
digestion….
The four main macromolecules in food: nucleic acids, proteins,
fats, and carbohydrates.
11
Digestive compartments
• For protists and some animals (like sponges),
digestion occurs through phagocytosis
12
Digestive compartments
• Most animals use a digestive compartment to process
food.
13
Digestive compartments
• Gastrovascular cavities are digestive compartments
surrounded by cells and have only a single opening.
• for both the entrance for food and the exit of undigested
wastes
14
Figure 22.4a
Gastrovascular Cavity
(compartment with single opening)
Single
opening
Food
(water flea)
Gastrovascular
cavity
Hydra
Digestive compartments
• Many animals, including earthworms and humans, have a
digestive tube with two separate openings – a mouth at
one end and an anus at the other.
16
Figure 22.4b
Anus
Intestine
Interior of
intestine
Earthworm
Human
digestion
A quick tour of the human digestive
system
• The human digestive system consists of a digestive
tube, the alimentary canal (or gut)
19
Figure 22.5
Salivary glands
Esophagus
Liver
Gallbladder Stomach
Pancreas
Small intestine
Colon of large intestine
Appendix
Rectum
Anus
Human digestion
The Oral Cavity
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• The pharynx (throat)
• Intersection of the
pathways for
swallowing and
breathing
• connects the mouth to
the esophagus and
• opens to the larynx,
which leads to the
trachea and lungs.
27
The small intestine
• The anus
• consists of two
sphincters smooth and
skeletal muscle and
• regulates the opening of
the rectum.
Colon of
large
intestine
Small
intestine
Rectum
Anus
Figure 22.14b
Sphincter
End
of small
intestine
Nutrient
flow
Appendix
Figure 22.15-4
Ingestion
Food into mouth
Mouth
Digestion
Mechanical digestion Food
Chewing in mouth
Churning in stomach
Chemical digestion
Saliva in mouth
Acid and pepsin in
stomach Stomach
Enzymes in small
intestine
Absorption
Nutrients and water Small
in small intestine intestine
Water in large
intestine
Elimination Large
Feces formed in intestine
large intestine
Anus
Elimination from anus
Feces
Figure 22.UN04
Mouth Salivary
Salivary glands Chewing
(oral cavity) amylase
Pharynx and
esophagus
Acid and
Stomach Churning pepsin (in
gastric juice)
Liver, Other Nutrients
Small
gallbladder, enzymes and water
intestine
pancreas
Large Water
intestine
Anus
Gastric amylase
(minor digestion only of
polysaccharides to
disaccharides)
41
References
Campbell Essential Biology Pearson Education, Inc. 2011
Campbell Essential Biology Pearson Education, Inc. 2013
Eckert Animal Physiology