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Animal Nutrition

Animal Nutrition. Nutrition : food taken in, food taken apart, food taken up. Nutrition is essential for Energy production (ATP): all activities from molecular to cellular level Biosynthesis: supply raw materials to build complex molecules to grow, maintain & reproduce.

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Animal Nutrition

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  1. Animal Nutrition

  2. Nutrition: food taken in, food taken apart, food taken up

  3. Nutrition is essential for • Energy production (ATP): all activities from molecular to cellular level • Biosynthesis: supply raw materials to build complex molecules to grow, maintain & reproduce

  4. Animals have diverse diets: • herbivores

  5. carnivores

  6. omnivores

  7. Most animals are opportunistic feeders

  8. Essential nutrients: materials that an animal’s cells require but cannot synthesize. • 4 classes of essential nutrients: • essential amino acids • essential fatty acids • vitamins • minerals

  9. Amino acids: Organic molecule with an amino group and an acid group

  10. Essential amino acids: • Must be obtained from prefabricated food • 8 in humans (infants - 9 – histidine) Animal products (meat, cheese, eggs) are complete “proteins”.

  11. Essential amino acids for adults • Most plants have “incomplete proteins” Beans and other legumes Methionine Valine Threonine Phenylalanine Leucine Corn (maize) and other grains Isoleucine Tryptophan Lysine

  12. Temporary use of muscle protein as a source of amino acids (penguins).

  13. Essential fatty acids: • Long carbon chain with an acid group • Unsaturated fatty acids (linoleic acid to make membrane phospholipids) • Seeds, grains vegetables SaturatedFatty acid Unsaturated Fatty acid

  14. Vitamins: • Organic molecules with diverse functions; required in the diet in small amounts. • Water soluble: B-complex, C, Biotin • Fat soluble: A, D, E, K

  15. Minerals: • Inorganic nutrients required in small amounts

  16. Dietary deficiencies: • Undernourishment: diet that supplies insufficient chemical energy • Malnourishment: long term absence from diet of one or more essential nutrients

  17. Undernourishment: diet that supplies insufficient chemical energy • Body uses up stored fats and carbohydrates • Breaks down muscles • Brain will become protein deficient • Death or irreversible damage • Places with turmoil in society (war, drought), or eating disorders

  18. Malnourishment: long term absence from diet of one or more essential nutrients • Among herbivores (fragile bones from lack of phosphorus) • Carnivores switch prey • Disease, deformities, death in humans, especially children

  19. Four main feeding mechanisms in animals: • Suspension feeders • Substrate feeders • Fluid feeders • Bulk feeders

  20. Suspension feeders: clams, oysters, whales

  21. Substrate feeders: live in or on the food source, caterpillars Feces Caterpillar

  22. Fluid feeders: suck nutrient-rich fluid from living host (have specialized organs) • Bulk feeders: Eat large pieces of food.

  23. Four main stages of nutrition: • Ingestion: act of eating • Digestion: food is broken down into small molecules that can be absorbed; mechanical & chemical – enzymatic hydrolysis) • Absorption: animal cells take up the break-down products • Elimination: passing out undigested material

  24. LE 41-12 Small molecules Pieces of food Chemical digestion (enzymatic hydrolysis) Nutrient molecules enter body cells Mechanical digestion Undigested material Food INGESTION ELIMINATION DIGESTION ABSORPTION

  25. Intracellular digestion: food is broken down inside food vacuoles

  26. Extracellular digestion: Breakdown happens in compartments that are outside of the body; hydra, earthworm, grasshopper, birds, humans

  27. Mouth Tentacles Gastrovascular cavity Food Epidermis Mesoglea Gastrodermis Nutritive muscular cells Flagella Gland cells Food vacuoles Mesoglea

  28. Crop Gizzard Intestine Esophagus Pharynx Anus Mouth Typhlosole Lumen of intestine Earthworm

  29. Midgut Hindgut Foregut Esophagus Rectum Anus Crop Mouth Gastric ceca Grasshopper

  30. Esophagus Stomach Gizzard Intestine Mouth Crop Anus Bird

  31. Salivary glands Mouth Esophagus • Human digestive system Gall- bladder Stomach Small intestines Liver Pancreas Large intestines Rectum Anus A schematic diagram of the human digestive system

  32. Peristalsis: alternating waves of contraction and relaxation in the smooth muscles lining the alimentary canal.

  33. Oral cavity: • Mechanical digestion, chewing. • Chemical digestion: Saliva

  34. Protein digestion Nucleic acid digestion Fat digestion Carbohydrate digestion Oral cavity, pharynx, esophagus Polysaccharides Disaccharides Salivary amylase Smaller polysac- charides, maltose

  35. Functions of saliva • salivary amylase, hydrolyzes starch • lubrication: mucin (glycoprotein) • preparation of food bolus • buffer • antibacterial function

  36. Swallowing has to be carefully choreographed to prevent food from entering airway

  37. Stomach: • stores food • continues digestion by churning and mixing with gastric juices (chyme). • low pH (~2)kills bacteria, HCl secreted by parietal cells • digests protein – pepsin, chief cells produce pepsinogen which is activated by HCl.

  38. Esophagus Cardiac orifice Stomach Pyloric sphincter 5 µm Small intestine Folds of epithelial tissue Interior surface of stomach Epithelium Pepsinogen and HCl are secreted into the lumen of the stomach. Pepsinogen Pepsin (active enzyme) Gastric gland HCl HCl converts pepsinogen to pepsin. Pepsin then activates more pepsinogen, starting a chain reaction. Pepsin begins the chemical digestion of proteins. Mucus cells Chief cells Parietal cells Chief cell Parietal cell

  39. Stomach secretes thick mucus to prevent its cells from getting corroded by HCl. • Sphincter (ring-like valve) at the junction of stomach and esophagus prevents backflow. Backflow causes “heartburn”. • Sphincter between stomach and small intestine allows food to go out in squirts. • Takes 2 to 6 hrs after a meal for the stomach to empty.

  40. Figure 22.10

  41. Protein digestion Nucleic acid digestion Fat digestion Carbohydrate digestion Oral cavity, pharynx, esophagus Polysaccharides Disaccharides Salivary amylase Smaller polysac- charides, maltose Stomach Proteins Pepsin Small polypeptides

  42. Bacteria Mucus layer of stomach 1 µm

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