vertebrate digestive system
Learn about this topic in these articles:
animals
- birds
- In bird: Muscles and organs
The avian digestive system shows adaptations for a high metabolic rate and flight. Enlargements of the esophagus, collectively called the crop, permit the temporary storage of food prior to digestion. The stomach is typically divided into a glandular proventriculus and a muscular gizzard, the latter lying near…
Read More - In anseriform: Physiology
…known about the physiology of digestion in waterfowl. It appears that, despite being almost entirely grazers, geese lack the ability to digest cellulose, either by the secretion of enzymes or by the symbiotic activities of microorganisms in the gut. Such inefficient digestion is probably correlated with the extraordinarily rapid passage…
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- In bird: Muscles and organs
- dogs
- In dog: Digestive system
Dogs rarely chew their food. Once the food is taken into the mouth, it is gulped or swallowed and passed through the esophagus into the stomach, where digestive enzymes begin to break it down. Most of the digestion and absorption of food takes…
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- In dog: Digestive system
- feeding behaviour
- In feeding behaviour: Regulation of food intake
Secondly, the capacity of the digestive system may set a limit on nutrient supply to the body. There is evidence that this is so in the minute filter-feeding crustacean Daphnia magna. Such limitations are known to play a role in human feeding behaviour.
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- In feeding behaviour: Regulation of food intake
- panda adaptation to bamboo diet
- In giant panda: Natural history
…giant panda has retained the digestive system of its carnivore ancestry and is therefore unable to digest cellulose, a main constituent of bamboo. Pandas solve this problem by rapidly passing prodigious quantities of the grass through their digestive tracts on a daily basis. As much as 16 out of every…
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- In giant panda: Natural history
- reptiles
- In reptile: Digestive and urogenital systems
The digestive system of modern reptiles is similar in general plan to that of all higher vertebrates. It includes the mouth and its salivary glands, the esophagus, the stomach, and the intestine and ends in a cloaca. Of the few specializations…
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- In reptile: Digestive and urogenital systems