notes Ch. 41 digestive
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Transcript notes Ch. 41 digestive
Chapter 41 - Animal Nutrition
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I. Types of Digestion- mechanical &
chemical breakdown of food into
smaller molecules that can be absorbed
by the cells
A. intracellular◦ 1. digestion inside a cell
◦ 2. occurs when a lysosome w/digestive
enzymes merges w/ a food vacuole
◦ 3. ex: paramecium
B. extracellular digestion –
◦ 1. food digested in a gastrovascular cavity
◦ 2. then absorbed by individual cells
◦ 3. most animals use this process
II. Nutrition – determined food
need
A. Organic cmpds.
◦ 1. carbohydrates a. contain CHO
b. broken down into glucose to be used as a
supply of energy
c. ex: sugars, starches
2. lipids – fats
◦ a. saturated – all carbons bonded with single
bonds, mostly from animals, solid at room
temp
◦ b. unsaturated – some carbons have double
bonds, mostly from plants, liquid at room
temp
◦ c. used for energy storage, protection,
insulation, cell membrane
◦ d. broken down into glycerol & fatty acids
3. proteins
◦ a. made of amino acids – your body breaks
them down into these aa’s & makes new
proteins with them
◦ b. animal products provide all necessary aa’s
◦ c. plant products lack some…(vegans?)
4. nucleid acids – broken down into
nucleotides
◦ a. nucleotide = sugar, phosphate, &
nitrogenous base
◦ b. only 2 in the known universe – DNA & RNA
5. vitamins – organic cmpds needed in
minute amts to help body use other
nutrients appropriately
*6. inorganic cmpds –
◦ a. minerals –
1) don’t contain carbon
2) needed in minute amts
B. Nutritional requirements
1. Undernourishment: caloric deficiency
2. Overnourishment (obesity): excessive
food intake
3. Malnourishment: essential nutrient
deficiency
4. Essential nutrients: materials that
must be obtained in preassembled form
5. Essential amino acids: the 8 amino
acids that must be obtained in the diet
6. Essential fatty acids: unsaturated fatty
acids
Nutritional requirements
III. Feeding mechanisms
A. Opportunistic
◦ 1. Herbivore: eat autotrophs
◦ 2. Carnivore: eat other animals
◦ 3. Omnivore: both
B. Feeding Adaptations
◦ 1. Suspension-feeders: aka filter feeders - sift
food from water (baleen whale)
◦ 2. Substrate-feeders: live in or on their food
(leaf miner) (earthworm:
deposit-feeder)
◦ 3. Fluid-feeders: suck fluids from a host
(mosquito)
◦ 4. Bulk-feeders: eat large pieces of food (most
animals)
Suspension, substrate, fluid, or bulk????
IV. Food processing
A. overview
◦ 1-Ingestion: act of eating
◦ 2-Digestion: process of food break down
a. enzymatic hydrolysis
◦ 1) intracellular: breakdown within cells
(sponges)
◦ 2) extracellular: breakdown outside cells (most
animals)
b. alimentary canals (digestive tract)
◦ 3- Absorption: cells take up small molecules
◦ 4- Elimination: removal of undigested material
B. Mammalian Digestion (human)
1. Mouth--food is masticated in the mouth
◦ a. mixed with saliva which contains amylase
1) enzyme that begins the chem breakdown of
starch into maltose (disaccharide)
2) food is shaped into a ball or bolus swallowed
2. Pharynx – bolus passes through back
of mouth
◦ a. uvula raises up to cover opening to nose
◦ b. epiglottis drops down to cover top of
trachea
3. esophagus – bolus passes through
tube leading from mouth to stomach
◦ a. peristalsis – muscle action that pushes food
through digestive tract
4. stomach – functions
◦
◦
◦
◦
a. food is stored – can expand to store 2-4L
b. mixes food to produce a mixture called chyme
c. physical dig occurs
d. produces gastrin (sight, smell, food in stomach)
which stimulates cells to produce gastric juices
e. chem digestion occurs
◦ 1) HCl denatures/unfolds the proteins (& kills
bacteria)
◦ 2) secretes gastric juice – mix of enzymes & HCl
◦ 3) proteins broken down by pepsin
a) pepsinogen (inactive form of pepsin)
produced by stomach cells
b) pepsinogen activated by HCl
c) stomach protected from HCl by mucus lining
d) when mucus lining is “eaten” through –
peptic ulcers occur
◦ -caused by bacteria ---treated w/ antibiotics
5. small intestine – bulk of digestion
occurs here – 3 sections (duodenum,
jejunum, & ileum
◦ a. continues digestion of starch & protein
◦ b. starts digestion of fats & nucleic acids
◦ c. enzymes
1) wall of SI secretes
◦ a) secretes secretin – stimulates the pancreas
to produce bicarbonate
◦ b) proteases – digest proteins (ex:
aminopeptidase)
◦ c) phosphatases – digests nucleic acids
◦ d) maltase & lactase – digests disaccharides
◦ e) cholecystokinin – stims gallbladder to
release bile & pancreas to release enzymes
2) pancreas – secretes enzymes in an
alkaline solution to neutralize HCl
◦
◦
◦
◦
a) trypsin – protease (break down proteins)
b) chymotrypsin – protease
c) lipase – fat break down
d) pancreatic amylase – starch breakdown
3) liver
◦ a) produces bile (alkaline – not an enzyme -stored in gall bladder)
◦ b) bile emulsifies fat – breaks it up into smaller
globules so enzymes have a greater surface area
to work on
4) villi & microvilli – finger-like projections
“fringe”
◦ a) increase surface area for absorption of
digested materials
4. Large Intestine – reabsorbs water
from what’s left over of the “food” to
form feces or solid wastes
◦ a. feces stored in end of LI, rectum, & pushed
out of the body (Valsalva muscle movement)
through the anus
V. Evolutionary adaptations
A. Dentition: an animal’s assortment of
teeth
B. Digestive system length
C. Symbiosis
D. Ruminants