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The Digestive System Functions • • • • • Ingestion (eating) Grinding Digestion Absorption of nutrients Elimination of solid wastes Introduction • Digestive system changes food nutrients into compounds easily absorbed by the body • Nutrients are used for: – Energy, growth and maintenance Definitions • Herbivores – Depend entirely on plants for food source – Ex. Cattle, sheep, horses, rabbits • Carnivores – Depend primarily on flesh of other animals – Ex. Dogs and cats • Omnivores – Consume both flesh and plants – Ex. Swine, poultry, humans Digestive Tract • Extends from the lips to the anus • Length of digestive tract depends upon the specie – Carnivores is usually short, herbivores is long • Simple and complex stomachs Mouth • Primary functions – Prehension • Grasping of food – Grinding of feed – Mixing feed and saliva Teeth • Responsible for grinding • Incisors are used for cutting food • Premolars and molars are responsible for grinding • Milk teeth – Lost and replaced by permanent teeth Tongue • • • • Used in prehension Aids in chewing process Mass of muscles covered by a membrane Covered with papillae which contain the taste buds Lips • Horses and sheep – Used in grasping feed – Used in sorting through feed • Swine and cattle – Keep mouth closed Other Mouth Parts • Cheeks – Lines food up with the teeth • Jaw – Lined with powerful muscles that aid in chewing • Hard Palate – Roof of the mouth • Soft Palate – Divides pharynx and oral cavity Salivary Glands • Common in the mucous lining of the mouth • Except for: – Tongue – Hard palate – Gums Pharynx • Common passageway for air and food • Several structures open into pharynx: – Mouth, nasal cavity, Eustachian tubes, larynx, and esophagus • Pushes food into the esophagus Esophagus • Connects the pharynx to the stomach • Walls have two layers of muscles – Muscles run at right angles to each other Non-Ruminant Stomach • • • • • Consist of only one compartment Called the ‘true stomach” On the left side of the body High surface area due to folding Gastric glands produce: – Hydrochloric acid – Enzymes: • Pepsin and rennin Ruminant Stomach • 4 parts: – Rumen, reticulum, omasum, abomasum • 1st three parts contain no glands, they soak food and allow for microbial digestion • Reticulum – Forward most portion – Honeycomb-like Ruminant Stomach • Rumen – Fills most of the left side of the abdomen – 2 parts: dorsal and ventral – Consist of two layers of smooth muscle – Mature ruminants: rumen accounts for 80% of the total stomach Ruminant Stomach • Omasum – Round in shape – Contains many small papillae which grind roughage • Abomasum – Only glandular stomach – Similar to a non-ruminant stomach Small Intestine • 3 parts: – Duodenum • Digestive juices from pancreas and liver – Jejunum – Ileum Large Intestine • Consists of: – Cecum • Shaped like a comma • Varies drastically in size across species – Horses and rabbits have largest ceca – Blind pouch – Colon – Anus Poultry Digestive System • Don’t have teeth • Crop – Stores and softens food • Gizzard – Grinds food – Contains grit and gravel • Proventriculus – Glandular stomach Pancreas • Exocrine functions – Produces digestive juices • Endocrine – Produces insulin Liver • On the right side of the body • Purifies blood Gallbladder • Attached to the liver • Produces bile • Green organ