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Evolutionary Digestive Adaptations in Vertebrates Digestive systems of vertebrates are variations on a common plan However, there are intriguing adaptations, often related to diet Dentition, an animal’s assortment of teeth, is one example of structural variation reflecting diet Herbivores generally have longer alimentary canals than carnivores, reflecting the longer time needed to digest vegetation Mutualistic Adaptations: Many herbivores have fermentation chambers, where symbiotic microorganisms digest cellulose The most elaborate adaptations for an herbivorous diet have evolved in the animals called ruminants Fig. 41-18 Incisors Canines (a) Carnivore (b) Herbivore (c) Omnivore Premolars Molars Fig. 41-19 Small intestine Stomach Small intestine Cecum Colon (large intestine) Carnivore Herbivore Fig. 41-20 1 Rumen 2 Reticulum Intestine Esophagus 4 Abomasum 3 Omasum Nutritional Aspects in Assimilation An animal’s diet provides chemical energy, which is converted into ATP and powers processes in the body Animals need a source of organic carbon and organic nitrogen in order to construct organic molecules Essential nutrients are required by cells and must be obtained from dietary sources Fig. 41-1 Nutrition: Carbohydrates Carbohydrates are present in food in the form of sugars, starch, and fiber. Fruits, vegetables, milk, and honey are natural sources of sugars. After being absorbed from the digestive tract all sugars are converted to glucose Glucose is the preferred direct energy source in cells. Plants store glucose as starch Animals store glucose as glycogen Nutrition: Proteins Adequate protein formation requires 20 different types of amino acids Adults require 8 from the diet, children require 9 Essential amino acids Some foods, such as meat, milk, and eggs, provide all 20 (complete) Vegetables supply one or more essential amino acids, but are deficient in at least one Vegetarians should combine plant products to provide all the essential amino acids Fig. 41-2 Essential amino acids for adults Methionine Valine Threonine Phenylalanine Leucine Corn (maize) and other grains Isoleucine Tryptophan Lysine Beans and other legumes Fig. 41-3 Nutrition: Lipids Fat, oils, and cholesterol Saturated fats (solids at room temperature) usually come from animals Exceptions are palm oil and coconut oil Contain mostly saturated fats Butter and meats, such as marbled red meats and bacon, contain saturated fats 11 Food High in Trans-fat Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. © Benjamin F. Fink, Jr./Brand X/Corbis 12 Nutrition: Vitamins Vitamins are organic molecules required in the diet in small amounts Must be obtained externally 13 vitamins essential to humans have been identified Vitamins are grouped into two categories: fatsoluble and water-soluble Nutrition: Minerals Minerals are simple inorganic nutrients, usually required in small amounts Nutrition: Fiber Includes various undigestible carbohydrates derived from plants Food sources rich in fiber include beans, peas, nuts, fruits, and vegetables Technically, fiber is not a nutrient for humans Cannot be digested Soluble fiber combines with bile acids and cholesterol in the small intestine and prevents them from being absorbed Fiber Rich Food Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. © Amiard/Photocuisine/Corbis 22 Dietary Deficiencies Undernourishment is the result of a diet that consistently supplies less chemical energy than the body requires Malnourishment is the long-term absence from the diet of one or more essential nutrients Undernourishment An undernourished individual will Use up stored fat and carbohydrates Break down its own proteins Lose muscle mass Suffer protein deficiency of the brain Die or suffer irreversible damage Malnourishment Malnourishment can cause deformities, disease, and death Malnourishment can be corrected by changes to a diet Fig. 41-4 Energy Sources and Stores Food energy balances the energy from metabolism, activity, and storage Nearly all of an animal’s ATP generation is based on oxidation of energy-rich molecules: carbohydrates, proteins, and fats Animals store excess calories primarily as glycogen in the liver and muscles Energy is secondarily stored as adipose, or fat, cells When fewer calories are taken in than are expended, fuel is taken from storage and oxidized Overnourishment and Obesity Overnourishment causes obesity, which results from excessive intake of food energy with the excess stored as fat Obesity contributes to diabetes (type 2), cancer of the colon and breasts, heart attacks, and strokes Fig. 41-22 100 µm Obesity and Evolution The problem of maintaining weight partly stems from our evolutionary past, when fat hoarding was a means of survival A species of birds called petrels become obese as chicks; in order to consume enough protein from highfat food, chicks need to consume more calories than they burn You should now be able to: 1. Distinguish between a complete digestive tract and a gastrovascular cavity 2. Describe the four main stages of food processing 3. Describe the functions of nutrients 4. Distinguish among undernourishment, overnourishment, and malnourishment 6. Follow a meal through the mammalian digestive system: – – 7. 8. List important enzymes and describe their roles Compare where and how the major types of macromolecules are digested and absorbed Relate variations in dentition with different diets Explain where and in what form energy-rich molecules may be stored in the human body In animal diets, essential amino acids are which of these? a. b. c. d. e. all the amino acids required to make proteins all the amino acids that cannot be made from organic nitrogen compounds all the organic compounds containing amino groups all the amino acids that can be obtained from plant foods all the amino acids that can be obtained from animal foods Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings. Which of the following is an adaptive advantage of having a complete digestive tract that is not true for a gastrovascular cavity with one opening? a. b. c. d. e. Extracellular digestion can occur. Teeth and tentacles can help with ingestion. It allows more surface area for absorption. It allows organization into specialized compartments. It allows elimination of undigested wastes. Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings. In humans, the first opportunity for ingested food to be broken down by hydrolysis is in the a. b. c. d. e. mouth. Stomach. Liver. small intestine. large intestine. Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings. Which of the following is directly caused by the hydrochloric acid (pH 2) in the stomach cavity? a. b. c. d. e. hydrolysis of polypeptides into amino acid. hydrolysis of fats into fatty acids and glycerol activation of pepsinogen into pepsin enzyme initial development of stomach ulcers secretion of mucus and constant production of new epithelial cells Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings. What is the role of bile salts in fat digestion? a. b. c. d. e. hydrolyzing fat molecules in globules to glycerol and fatty acids separating individual fat molecules from each other dissolving fats in water preventing small fat droplets from coalescing into larger globules triggering the activation of lipases from the pancreas Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings. If we follow a fatty acid that is absorbed into an intestinal epithelial cell, we would find it doing all of the following except which one? a. b. c. d. e. being synthesized into a triglyceride in the epithelial cell entering a lacteal vessel as a chylomicron entering a blood vessel as a chylomicron being incorporated into chylomicrons in the epithelial cell exiting the epithelial cell by exocytosis of the chylomicron Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings. What is the adaptive function of specialized digestive tract chambers in vegetarian animals like cows and horses? a. b. c. d. e. to maintain low pH for stomach enzymes for entry of bile and pancreatic enzymes for storage of partially digested plant material for symbiotic bacteria required for cellulose digestion for consolidation of undigested waste before defecation Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings.