Animal Science Exam #2 Study guide
The Endocrine System is made up of...
1.Hypothalamus 2.Pituitary 3.Thyroid & Parathyroid Glands 4.Adrenal Glands 5.Ovaries (Female) & Testes (Male) 6.Pancreas
Experience stimuli
Animals learn from interactions they have had with their environment. -avoiding things that previously resulted in a bad experience. -For example some butterflies are toxic to animals that eat them. These butterflies usually have bright and elaborate wing patters so that predators can easily recognize them as toxic and thus avoid them.
Thoughts related to internal stimuli
Animals preferences and motivations. -They never do things for no reason at all. Their behavior always indicates some underlying mechanism at work.
Social behaviors associated with feeding
Feeding competition, Hunting, and communication and learning
What animal has the largest cecum that we know of?
Capybara
In horses, the majority of microbes that are needed to break down cellulose are located in the _______.
Cecum
Types of internal stimuli?
Hormones, physiological state, and thoughts
What chemical in the stomach activates enzymes?
Hydrochloric Acid (HCL)
What enzymes do the stomach contain?
Lipase and Protease (Pepsin)
monogastrics (nonruminants)
Simple Stomach; one gastric. Mono-gastric animals (most omnivores and all carnivores) don't need a complicated stomach since they eat food that is easy to digest.
Ruminants have no top teeth.
True
Ruminants need lots of bacteria in their stomach to break down cellulose.
True
Ruminants will spend about 8 hours per day ruminating.
True
The length of the digestive tract correlates to how easy the food is to digest.
True
The pancreas is also critical for recognizing when there is an abundance of nutrients in the blood.
True
Abomasum
True stomach of ruminants
Animals that eat more plant matter have a larger cecum.
True
HCL and bile salts are not an enzyme
True
Hippos are non-ruminant
True
Enzymes from the Small intestine Brush Border
lactase, maltase, peptidase. -These enzymes finish the job, reducing the macromolecules into their smallest subunits (monosaccharides and amino acids)
sections of small intestine
duodenum, jejunum, ileum
continuous feeders
grazing animals; eat lower quality food, food is scattered
Gluconeogenesis
formation of glucose
Epimeletic behavior
giving care and attention
Trypsinogen
inactive form of trypsin; -Trypsinogen converts to Trypsin when it interacts with the acidic chyme that has just entered the small intestine from the stomach.
components of digestive system
mouth, esophagus, stomach, cecum, small and large intestines and rectum
Simple Behavior
muscle contractions in response to some stimulus like a tap to your knee, reflex actions, instinct.
The microbes help the ruminant by:
-Digesting of cellulose and hemicellulose (structural carbohydrates) that cannot be broken down by enzymes -Providing high quality protein (in the form of deceased microbes) -Producing Volatile fatty Acids - the major energy source for the ruminant -Providing B vitamins-Detoxifying toxic compounds
large intestine
-Absorbs water and forms feces -The major site of microbial (e.g bacteria) fermentation (breakdown of hard to digest plant material, aka cellulose).
The ruminant helps the microbes by:
-Providing microbes with an optimal place to live and grow (i.e. the rumen) -Feeding them -Removing the waste of the microbes (which is actually the VFA's ruminants need to survive!)
Hormones related to internal stimuli
-Testosterone is a male sex hormone and it is responsible for many of the dominate/aggressive type behaviors seen in males particularly around the time of mating -Ghrelin which is a hormone produced in your stomach when your stomach is empty. It sends a message to the brain tell you that you're hungry and that you should eat.
unsacculated colonic digesters
-do not have a need for the sacculated intestine because they have very limited ability to digest fiber. -Take note of the "smoothness" of the large intestine. -cats, dogs (and other carnivores)
Examples of pre-gastric fermenters
-ruminants (cow, goat, sheep, camel, deer, antelope) -non-ruminants (kangaroo, hippo, colobus monkey, hamster, vole)
Hormones related to nutrition include
1. Ghrelin 2. Leptin 3. Secretin 4. CCK (Cholecystokinin) 5. Insulin 6. Glucagon
Steps of rumination are
1. Regurgitation -Moving food from the stomach back up into the mouth. 2. Remastication - Chewing the food for the second time. 3. Rein salivation - Mixing the with additional saliva 4. Re-swallowing - Swallowing the food for the second time.
Ghrelin
A hunger-arousing hormone secreted by an empty stomach
Rectum
A short tube at the end of the large intestine where waste material is compressed into a solid form before being eliminated
What enzymes do the mouth contain?
Amylase and Lipase
What enzymes do the small intestine contain?
Amylase, Lipase, and Protease
Why do herbivores have longer digestive tracts?
Carnivores eat meat; protein is quite easy to digest and absorb. Omnivores and herbivores eat more plants which take longer to digest. A longer small intestine gives more time for enzymes to break down the plant food as it slowly moves along the digestive tract. This optimizes the amount of nutrients that can be extracted from plants!
Five Categories of Animal Behavior
Communication Social behaviors Feeding behaviors Reproductive behaviors Maternal/Neonatal behaviors
Communication and learning
Communication & Learning; animals learn particularly when they are young, where to find food, how to eat, and what types of foods are safe to eat!
Ruminants
Complex stomach; Four stomachs The function of the four compartments is to break down the hard-to-digest grasses with cellulose. -The last part of a ruminant stomach (the abomasum or real stomach) functions exactly like the monogastric stomach
Complex behavior
Complex: bird migration, mating rituals, hibernation, reproduction, grooming, feeding, locomotion, etc.
Amylase enzymes
Digest carbohydrates into simple sugars.
Lipase Enzymes
Digest lipids into fatty acids
Protease Enzymes
Digest proteins into amino acids
Reticulum
Digesta flows freely between the rumen and reticulum. There is no enzymatic activity here. -Contracts to help regurgitate food for rumination. -Characterized by honeycomb" lining.
small intestine
Digestive organ where most chemical digestion and absorption of food takes place. -important accessory organs to break down all three macromolecules: The Liver and Pancreas.
hindgut fermenters
Do all of their fermentation in the cecum and large intestine.
pre-gastric fermenters
Do most of their fermentation of food BEFORE the "true" stomach (e.g. abomasum in ruminants). The "true" stomach has the acid and enzymes for digestion.
Types of external stimuli?
Environment and experience
villi
Fingerlike extensions of the intestinal mucosa that increase the surface area for absorption in the small intestine.
duodenum
First part of the small intestine. -Most digestion takes place in this section. All types of macromolecules are digested here via enzymes (carbohydrates, protein and fat)
peristalsis
Involuntary waves of muscle contraction that keep food moving along in one direction through the digestive system.
relationship between leptin and ghrelin
Leptin is a mediator of long term regulation of energy balance, suppressing food intake and thereby inducing weight loss. Satiety Ghrelin, on the other hand, is a fast acting hormone, playing a role in meal initiation. Hunger
physiological state related to internal stimuli
Occurs when animals are pregnant, ready to mate, etc. -For example, when a cow is ready to delivery her calf she becomes a lot more restless approximately 11 hours prior to birth.
Enzymes from the Pancreas
Pancreatic amylase, trypsin, pancreatic lipase. -These enzymes start breaking down the big macromolecules
Two important cells of the stomach wall
Parietal and Chief
Maternal behaviors examples
Placentophagia, nest building, and maternal agression
Mastication
Process of chewing
six basic nutrients post-digestion
Proteins-Amino Acid Lipid-Fatty Acid Carbohydrates-Monosaccharide vitamins minerals Water
cecal fermenters
Size of the cecum compared to the large intestine is much larger (holds more food) -rabbits and rats
Environment stimuli
Something in the animal's environment causes or influences the behavior. -The horse is a herd animal and its' instinct it to flee when it perceives a threat. -a stimulus in their environment is new or perhaps moves or makes noise (i.e. trees blowing in the wind), causing a horse to become startled or run
Feeding behavior examples
Sorting Behavior and Exploratory/ investigative Behavior
Fermentation
The chemical breakdown of a substance (e.g. forages like grass) by bacteria, yeast or other micro-organisms. Microbes are specialized to digest foods high in cellulose (aka Fiber).
Sacculated colonic digesters
The design of the colon is sacculated (meaning lots of folds or pockets) to provide more surface area for microbes to ferment cellulose. -Horses, humans, and pigs
Goal of digestion
The goal of digestion is to reduce complex macromolecules into simple subunits.
Examples of harvesting equipment
The mouth, prehensile, mastication, and teeth.
Hunting
This is an example of cooperation to get food.
Lordosis (swayback)
This reflex behavior, is a naturally occurring body posture for sexual receptivity to copulation present in most mammals including rodents, elephants, and cats. The back arches so that the pelvis of the female is at an optimal angle for copulation with the male.
Communication examples
Visual; an example is cats (and most other animals) communicating through establishing specific body positions when threatened or frightened. Auditory; Most social species have elaborate systems of vocalizations that humans are just beginning to understand. Olfactory; Animals use scent (e.g. urine or other body fluids) to mark territories and help with the recognition of their peers/family. Touch; Just like humans some animals use touch to communicate complex emotions or feelings. Many species of apes for example use touch as a form of consolation to make the other feel better. Other forms of touch seem to occur only to antagonize the receiver! Electro; Animals that either generate or receive electric fields are found only in wet or aquatic environments due to water's relatively low electrical resistance, compared to other substances. Electric eels use this. Seismic; Information is conveyed through mechanical vibrations of the substrate (e.g. dirt, sand, web, honeycomb, etc.). The star-nosed mole (Links to an external site.) (Condylura cristata), has evolved an elaborate nose structure which may detect seismic waves. Spiders can communicate location of prey and test for faults in their web by using tiny vibrations.
Sodium Bicarbonate (NaHCO3)
a buffer from Duct Cells which quickly neutralizes acid from the stomach.
pharynx
a common passage for food and air, lined by a mucous membrane and surrounded by muscle.
cecum
a pouch connected to the junction of the small and large intestines. -major site of microbial and cellulose fermentation
Discontinuous feeders
active, highly mobile animals; more specialized digestion; take in large meals
Animal Behavior
an action, activity, or process which can be observed and measured.
How do enzymes work?
binding to a macromolecule and then breaking the bond that holds the macromolecule subunits together
prehensile
capable of grasping
et-epimeletic behavior
care seeking
Feeding competition
commonly observed in animals since food is such an important resource at its availability may be limited for a number of reasons (e.g. growing season, temperature, space availability for feeding. Competition can be expressed in terms of threats (growls, baring teeth, aggressive body posture) and physical attacks.
Sexual/reproductive behavior examples
courtship, signaling of receptivity (estrus/"heat", and swayback) and process of copulation.
function of bile
emulsify fats
Leptin
hormone that signals the hypothalamus and brain stem to reduce appetite and increase the amount of energy used
Examples of hindgut fermenters
horses and rabbits
Placentophagia
ingestion of the placenta to create a bond with an animals offspring. Scents and pheromones that come from the placenta help the mother recognize the offspring as her own.
What are the types of salivary glands?
parotid, submandibular, sublingual
neonatal
pertaining to newborn
liver
produces bile
rBST & rGH
recombinant Somatotropin and recombinant Growth Hormone
Jejunum
second part of the small intestine. -Major site of nutrient absorption of nutrients. Water absorption also occurs here.
parietal cells
secrete HCl
chief cells
secrete pepsinogen
Rumen
stomach chamber in cows and related animals in which symbiotic bacteria digest cellulose. -characterized by the carpet like lining with many projections
gall blader
stores bile
colonic digestors
the cecum is much smaller relative to the large intestine
Maternal behavior
the formation of a bond between mother and offspring. Involves hormonal regulation. Neonatal behavior can reflect learning in young and provide insights into development.
Ileum
the last and longest portion of the small intestine. -Continuation of absorption of nutrients and water. -Connects to the large intestine and cecum
standing heat (estrus)
the short window of time that a female is sexually receptive meaning she has just ovulated an egg which is ready to be fertilized by sperm.
Omasum
water absorption