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DIGESTIVE SYSTEM

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... Rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum HOLD 250 QUARTS OF ... Abomasum is the only part of young ruminant animals developed. ... Milk goes right to the abomasum. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DIGESTIVE SYSTEM


1
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM ABSORPTION OF FOOD NUTRIENTS
  • AGRICULTURE PRODUCTION
  • OCTOBER 2006
  • MR. JANISCH

2
INTRODUCTION
  • DIGESTION--PROCESS OF BREAKING FEED DOWN INTO
    SIMPLE SUBSTANCE THAT CAN BE ABSORBED BY THE BODY
  • ABSORPTION--TAKING IN THE DIGESTIVE PARTS OF THE
    FEED INTO THE BLOODSTREAM.
  • RUMINANTSANIMALS THAT HAVE A STOMACH, DIVIDED
    INTO SEVERAL PARTS. CATTLE, SHEEP AND GOATS. CUD
    CHEWING
  • NONRUMINANTSSIMPLE ONE COMPARTMENT STOMACHPIGS,
    HORSES, CHICKENS

3
Digestive Systems
  • Digestive Systemconsists of the parts of he body
    involved in chewing and digesting feed, moving
    the feed through the body and absorbs the
    products of digestion.
  • Large differences between ruminants and
    nonruminants

4
Difference
  • Ruminants can digest large quantities of fibrous
    feeds hay pastures
  • Nonruminantsneed high energy, low fiber ration
  • ConcentratesGrains and protein supplement
  • Roughagehigh fiber feeds hay, pasture
  • Horsesdigest 39 of the roughage
  • Swinedigest 22 percent roughage
  • Bacteriadigest roughage in ruminants
  • Produce proteins, B-Complex vitamins and Vitamin K

5
PARTS OF DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Mouthfood enter the animal body.
  • Esophagus/gullettubelike passage from the mouth
    to the stomach.
  • Stomach receives the feed and add chemicals which
    help in the digestive process
  • Small intestinelong folded tube attached to the
    lower end of the stomach.
  • Large intestineLarger in diameter, but shorter
    in length
  • Rectumend of the large intestine
  • Anusfeces is passed through the anus

6
Accessory Organs
  • Mouthteeth, tongue, salivary glands
  • Liverlargest gland in the body. Located along
    the small intestine just past the stomach.
  • Bile--The thin, yellowish-brown or greenish
    liquid secreted by the liver
  • Pancreasupper part of the small intestine.
  • Pancreatic juice--The clear, watery fluid with an
    alkaline reaction secreted by the pancreas that
    aids in feed breakdown

7
Poultry Difference
  • Have no teeth
  • Crop and gizzard
  • Caceaattach to the small intestine
  • Cloacaenlarge part connected to the large
    intestine
  • Ventelimination of feces

8
DIGESTIVE PROCESS
  • Mouth Esophagus
  • Chewing action of the mouth and teethbreaks up,
    cuts and tear up the feed
  • Increase surface area of the feed particleshelps
    with chewing and swallowing process
  • Salivastimulates the taste
  • Enzymessubstance that are organic catalysts
    which speed up digestive process.
  • Salivary amylase changes starch to maltose or
    malt sugar. Salivary maltase changes maltose to
    glucose.

9
Ruminants Digestive
  • Ruminant do not chew their food. Roughage are
    rechewed later.
  • Ruminant (chewing the cud)
  • Roughages forms ball-like masses in the stomach.
  • The material is forced back up the esophagus to
    be chewed again.

10
General Process
  • Tongue direct the feed to the throat for
    swallowing.
  • Chewed material enters the esophagus
  • Food is carried down the esophagus by a series of
    muscle contractions
  • Cardiavalve at the end of the esophagus
  • Prevents food from coming back into the esophagus.

11
Ruminant Stomach
  • 4 PartsRumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum
    HOLD 250 QUARTS OF FEED
  • Ruminants eat rapidly
  • Do not chew much of the feed before swallowing it
  • Solid feed goes to rumen
  • Liquidabomasum
  • Rumen the feed is mixed and partially broken down
    by bacteria
  • Slow churning and mixing takes place.

12
Ruminant Stomach II
  • Rumen is full, animal lies down
  • Ruminationfeed is forced back into the mouth
  • Cattle chew their cud about 6-8 x/ day.
  • 5-7 hours is spent in rumination.
  • Rumen and reticulum85 of the stomach
  • Left side and middle of the animal.
  • ReticulumKnown as the honeycomb and or hardware
    pouch.

13
Bacteria and Protozoa
  • Found in the rumen and reticulum
  • Muscles break the food into smaller particles for
    the bacteria to act in the digestion process.
  • Bacteria changes low quality protein into amino
    acids.
  • Amino Acidessential for growth and maintenance
    of cells.
  • As the bacteria diesanimals digest them for
    protein and vitamins.

14
Bacteria and ProtozoaItems that affect them
  • Type of feed
  • Going from forage to concentratesbuilds up
    acids.
  • pH5.5 to 8 (optimum is 6.5)outside of this
    rangereduces bacteria
  • Ureais fed to the animals to increase ammonia,
    basic source of energy. Careful to make sure you
    do not burn the animals.

15
Bloat
  • Large amount of carbon dioxide and methane gas is
    released by the bacteria
  • Disposed through the digestive system
  • Excessive gas builds upbloat
  • Fresh grass or legumes
  • Gas Bloat
  • Foamy Bloat.

16
Omasum
  • Makes up the 8 of the stomach
  • Strong muscles in its wall
  • MANY PLIES
  • Function not really known.
  • Squeeze water out of feed.

17
Abomasum
  • True Stomach
  • Makes up 7 of the stomach
  • Feed is mixed with gastric juice
  • Grain goes straight to the abomasum.
  • Same as in nonruminant animals.

18
Rumen Development
  • Abomasum is the only part of young ruminant
    animals developed.
  • Young animals can not eat roughages
  • Milk goes right to the abomasum.
  • Rumen develops in two month along with the
    reticulum and the omasum
  • 3 month of agerumen can begin its function

19
RUMEN--MAIN COMPARTMENT CONTAINS BACTERIA TO
BREAKDOWN FOOD
RETICULUM-HONEYCOMB,HARDWARE
ABOMASUM-TRUE STOMACH
OMASUM--MANY PLIES-WATER
20
SIMPLE STOMACHS
  • SWINE
  • HOLDS 8 1/2 QUARTS--TAKES 24 HOURS TO PASS
    THROUGH
  • HORSE RABBITS SIMILAR
  • HORSES CECUM COLON ENLARGE TO HOLD 120-140
    QUARTS OF FEED--
  • CAN DIGEST LARGE AMOUNT OF ROUGHAGE--BACTERIA
    PRESENT IN AREA, AIDS IN DIGESTION OF ROUGHAGE

21
NonRuminant Stomach
  • Feed entersgastric juice begins to flow
  • Juices come from glands in the wall of the
    stomach
  • .2 to .5 hydrochloric acid
  • Stops amylase
  • Contains enzymespepsin, rennin and gastric
    lipase
  • Muscular walls of the stomach churn and squeeze
    the feed.
  • Liquids are pushed into the small intestine
  • Gastric juice acts on the solids

22
Gastric Juice
  • Pepsinbreak down protein into proteose and
    peptones
  • Rennincurdles the casein
  • Gastric lipasesplits the emulsified fats into
    glycerol and fatty acids

23
Small Intestine
  • When feed leaves the stomachit is an acid, semi
    fluid gray, pulpy massChyme
  • Chyme in small intestine, is mixed with three
    digestive juices Pancreatic juice, bile and
    intestinal juice.

24
JUICES ENZYMES
  • PANCREATIC JUICE--SECRETED BY THE PANCREAS
  • TRYPSIN--BREAKS DOWN PROTEINS
  • Proteose and peptones are broken down by trypsin
    and peptides
  • Proteoses, peptones and peptides are amino acids
  • Proteoses most complex and peptides the simplest.
  • PANCREATIC AMYLASE--CHANGES STARCH IN THE FEED
    INTO MALTOSE. MALTASE--CHANGES SUGAR INTO GLUCOSE

25
JUICES ENZYMES II
  • LIPASE--WORKS ON FATS IN THE FEED--INTO FATTY
    ACIDS AND GLYCEROL
  • BILEProduced by the liver. STORED IN THE GALL
    BLADDER--AIDS INTO THE DIGESTION OF FATS AND
    FATTY ACID. It helps in the action of the enzyme
    of lipase.

26
Intestinal Juice
  • Glands in the wall of small intestine produce
    intestinal juice.
  • Fluids containspeptidase, sucrase, maltase and
    lactaseaids in digestion.
  • Proteoses and peptones are broken down by
    peptidase into amino acids.
  • Starch and sugars are broken down by sucrase,
    maltase and lactase into simple sugars, glucose,
    fructose and galactose.

27
Caecum
  • Blind Gutplace where the small intestine and
    large intestine joins
  • Little function except the horse/rabbit
  • In horsesroughages are digested by bacteria eats
    large amounts of roughages

28
Large Intestine
  • Shorter in length than the small intestine
  • Main function is the absorption of water.
  • Small intestine juices still acts on the feed
  • Some bacteria works on the feed
  • Large intestine adds mucus to enable the material
    to pass through
  • Fecesundigested feed not absorbed. Push through
    by muscles in the intestine walls.

29
MUST CHEW FOOD AND MIX WITH SALIVA IN THE MOUTH
BEFORE SWALLOWED.

STOMACH CONTAINS ACIDS THAT BREAKS DOWN THE FEED.
CAN NOT BREAK DOWN HAY VERY WELL-DUE TO THE FIBER
IN HAY
30
CHICKEN DIGESTION
  • TONGUES PUSHES FEED TO GULLET
  • GULLET TO THE CROP PRE-DIGESTION
  • FEED IS SOFTEN BY SALIVA SECRETIONS
  • CROP IS STORAGE
  • GIZZARD-CRUSHED AND MIXED
  • STOMACH ACTION BY THE MEANS OF JUICESGRIT AND
    GRAVEL ACTION CRUSHES THE FEED.
  • SMALL INTESTINE-SITE OF ABSORPTION.MOST
    ABSORPTION OCCURS IN THE LOOP INTESTINES
  • CACEAFOUND WHERE THE SMALL INTESTINE JOINS THE
    LARGE INESTINE. FUNCTION UNKNOWN.
  • CLOACAENLARGE WHERE THE LARGE INTESTINE JOINS
    THE VENT.
  • VENTFECES PASS THROUGH.
  • EGGS AND URINE ALSO PASS THROUGH

31
VENT
CROP-STORAGE
CLOACA--SMALL INTESTINE VENT JOIN
GIZZARD CRUSHED JUICES
LOOP--MOST ABSORPTION
32
Absorption
  • Villilines the wall of the small intestine with
    fingerlike projections.
  • Villi increase the absorption of the small
    intestine
  • Villihas a network of blood capillaries and
    lymph system through which nutrients enter the
    blood system.
  • Most food nutrients are absorbed from the the
    small intestine.

33
Absorption II
  • When absorb Goes from Villiblood
    capillariesliverblood.
  • Digested protein forms amino acids
  • Starches and sugarsglucose, frutose, and
    galactose
  • Fibershort-chained fatty acids
  • Digested Fatformed into fats and absorbed by the
    lymph vessel. Carried through the lymphatic
    system, pass through the thoracic duct in the
    neck into the circulatory system.

34
Nutrients
  • Most nutrients end their journey in the muscle
    cells
  • Some nutrients deposit in the live
  • Nutrients are used to replace worn out cells and
    build new ones
  • Some nutrients are used for energy
  • Some nutrients are stored in the form of fat for
    later use.

35
METABOLISM
  • METABOLISM--SUM OF THE PROCESSES, CHEMICAL
    PHYSICAL OF THE NUTRIENTS BY THE CELLS AFTER THEY
    ARE ABSORBED FROM DIGESTION.
  • METABOLISM PROCESS INCLUDE
  • ANABOLISM--FORMATION AND REPAIR OF BODY TISSUES
  • CATABLOLISM--BREAKDOWN OF BODY TISSUES INTO
    SIMPLE SUBSTANCE AND WASTE PRODUCTS
  • OXIDATION--NUTRIENTS PROVIDES ENERGY FOR THE
    ANIMAL.
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