1. 2 Lecture 13 Outline (Ch. 41) I.Animal Nutrition Overview II.Essential Parts of Animal Diet III. Food Intake IV.Digestive Compartments V.Adaptations.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Animal Nutrition Chapter 41.
Advertisements

Animal Nutrition II (Ch. 41) Guest lecturer: Letitia Reichart (Letty)
DIGESTION & ABSORPTION
Lecture 10 Outline (Ch. 41) I. Animal Nutrition Overview Food Intake
Human Digestive System (Hope you don’t find this too hard to digest)
Digestive System. Table p Figure 21.21_1 Weight (pounds)  50  52  54  56  58  510.
WARM-UP 1. (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange? 2. (Review) What are the 4 classes of macromolecules? 3. (Ch. 41) You eat a piece.
Evolutionary Digestive Adaptations in Vertebrates  Digestive systems of vertebrates are variations on a common plan  However, there are intriguing adaptations,
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
The Digestive System Marki, Anastasia, and Pritch.
NUTRITION AND DIGESTION
Animal nutrition Chapter 41.
Nutrition and Digestion
1. 2 Lecture 13 Outline (Ch. 48) I.Animal Nutrition Overview II.Essential Parts of Animal Diet III. Food Intake IV.Digestive Compartments V.Adaptations.
Animal Nutrition. nutrition Food taken in, taken apart and taken up Herbivores – plants/algae Carnivores – eat other animals Omnivores – consume animals.
Animal Nutrition. Nutrition: food taken in, food taken apart, food taken up.
Objective: You will be able to identify the structures of the digestive system. Do Now: Read all of page 978 Give the function of the digestive system.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Chapter 41 Notes Animal Nutrition. Nutritional Requirements The flow of energy into and out of an animal can be viewed as a “budget” - most of the energy.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Presentations for Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition. Nutritional requirements Undernourishment: caloric deficiency Overnourishment (obesity): excessive food intake Malnourishment:
Chapter 45: Processing Food and Nutrition The Digestive System.
1. 2 Lecture 10 Outline (Ch. 41) I.Animal Nutrition Overview II.Essential Parts of Animal Diet III. Food Intake IV.Digestive Compartments V.Adaptations.
Lecture 13 Outline (Ch. 41) I.Animal Nutrition Overview II.Food Intake III.Digestive Compartments IV.Adaptations V.Energy sources and stores VI. Summary.
Most animals ingest chunks of food
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition. Types of Feeders Suspension feeders sift through water to obtain small food particles Fluid feeders suck nutrients from a.
Animal Nutrition TOPIC 13/14
Blood sugar levels regulated by pancreatic hormones insulin and glucagon.
Animal Nutrition Food for Fuel or Biosynthesis. Nutritional requirements Chemical Energy is obtained from the oxidation of complex organic molecules.
Digestion Food: The easiest thing you will pass in school.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition and Digestion. Need to Feed Dietary categories Carnivore Herbivore Omnivore Animals are truly opportunistic eaters meaning.
Nutritional requirements Undernourishment: caloric deficiency Overnourishment (obesity): excessive food intake Malnourishment: essential nutrient deficiency.
Chapter 41 - Animal Nutrition. Negative feedback.
Chapter 41: Animal Nutrition Jonah Lewis AP Biology Block C.
Animal Nutrition Chapter 41 Animals are heterotrophs They eat for three reasons: To obtain fuel for cell processes To get carbon to build organic molecules.
DIGESTION.
Lecture #18 Date ______  Chapter 41 ~ Animal Nutrition **** DO NOT rely on notes to teach you. These are provided to summarize the key points that YOU.
Animal Nutrition. We need to eat! Since we as animals cannot produce our own food, we must EAT it. Classifying organisms by what they eat…  Herbivores:
The Digestive System.
Lecture #18 Date ______ Chapter 41 ~ Animal Nutrition.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Presentations for Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell.
The Small Intestine The small intestine is the longest section of the alimentary canal It is the major organ of digestion and absorption.
Animal nutrition – the need to feed 1)Homeostatic mechanisms manage an animal´s energy budget 2)An animal´s diet must supply carbon skeletons and essential.
6.1 Digestion Readings IB Pg Overview: The Need to Feed Heterotrophs –dependent on a regular supply of food Animals fall into three categories:
Lecture 12 Outline (Ch. 41) I.Animal Nutrition Overview II.Food Intake III.Digestive Compartments IV.Adaptations V.Energy sources and stores VI. Before.
Animal Nutrition Ch. 41 Lecture Objectives Importance of Food
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
Allison Wetshtein Jessica Wetshtein
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
Animal Nutrition Chapter 41 Figure 41.1
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
Animal Nutrition.
Essential amino acids from a vegetarian diet
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
NUTRITION AND DIGESTION
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
Chapter 41: Animal Nutrition
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
Nutrition and Digestion
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
Animal Nutrition Food for Fuel or Biosynthesis.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition
Animal Nutrition Chapter 41.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
Chapter 41- Animal Nutrition
Presentation transcript:

1

2 Lecture 13 Outline (Ch. 41) I.Animal Nutrition Overview II.Essential Parts of Animal Diet III. Food Intake IV.Digestive Compartments V.Adaptations VI.Obesity VII.Lecture Concepts

3 Overview: The Need to Feed Food is taken in, taken apart, and taken up in the process of animal nutrition In general, animals fall into three categories: –Herbivores eat mainly autotrophs (plants, algae) –Carnivores eat other animals –Omnivores regularly consume animals as well as plants or algal matter

4 How does a diet of lean fish help make a bear fat?

5 Chemical energy, which is converted into ATP and powers processes in the body Organic carbon and organic nitrogen Essential nutrients must be obtained from dietary sources Essential Parts of Diet –Essential amino acids –Essential fatty acids –Vitamins –Minerals

6 Meat, eggs, cheese - provide all nine essential amino acids ( “complete” proteins) Individuals eating only plant proteins need specific plant combinations for all essential amino acids Essential Parts of Diet Beans and other legumes Corn (maize) and other grains Lysine Essential amino acids for adults Tryptophan Isoleucine Leucine Phenylalanine Threonine Valine Methionine

7 Essential Fatty Acids Animals can synthesize most fatty acids they need The essential fatty acids are certain unsaturated fatty acids that must be obtained from the diet Deficiencies in fatty acids are rare

8 Vitamins Vitamins: organic molecules, small amounts needed 13 vitamins essential to humans have been identified Two categories: fat-soluble & water-soluble B-complex Biotin Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) Vitamin A Vitamin D Vitamin E Vitamin K Table 41-1

9 Minerals Minerals: simple inorganic nutrients, usually required in small amounts Calcium Phosphorus Potassium Sulfur Chlorine Sodium Magnesium Iron Table 41-2

10 Dietary Deficiencies Undernourishment – diet consistently low in chemical energy Malnourishment – long-term absence of essential nutrients An undernourished individuals use up stores, break down own protein and muscle Malnourishment can cause deformities, disease, and death

11 Ingestion: the act of eating Suspension feeders - many aquatic animals, which sift small food particles from the water Substrate feeders are animals that live in or on their food source Fluid feeders suck nutrient-rich fluid from a living host Bulk feeders eat relatively large pieces of food Food Intake

12 Humpback whale, a suspension feeder Baleen Leaf miner caterpillar, substrate feeder Caterpillar Feces Mosquito, a fluid feeder Rock python, a bulk feeder

13 Digestion is the process of breaking food down into molecules small enough to absorb –In chemical digestion, the process of enzymatic hydrolysis splits bonds in molecules with the addition of water Absorption is uptake of nutrients by body cells Elimination is the passage of undigested material out of the digestive compartment

14 IngestionDigestion Absorption Elimination Undigested material Chemical digestion (enzymatic hydrolysis) Nutrient molecules enter body cells Small molecules Mechanical digestion Food Pieces of food Food Intake

15 Digestive Compartments Most animals process food in specialized compartments Reduces risk animal digesting its own cells/ tissues Gastrovascular cavity Food Epidermis Mouth Tentacles Gastrodermis

16 More complex animals: digestive tube with two openings (mouth, anus) Tube called a complete digestive tract or an alimentary canal Can have specialized regions, carry out digestion and absorption stepwise Digestive Compartments Esophagus Mouth Pharynx CropGizzard Typhlosole Intestine Lumen of intestine Anus (b) Grasshopper Foregut (c) Bird (a) Earthworm MidgutHindgut Esophagus Rectum Anus Mouth Crop Gastric cecae Esophagus Mouth Crop Anus Stomach Gizzard Intestine

17 Cecum Anus Ascending portion of large intestine Gall- bladder Small intestine Large intestine Small intestine Rectum Pancreas Liver Salivary glands Tongue Oral cavity Pharynx Esophagus Sphincter Stomach Sphincter Duodenum of small intestine Appendix Liver Pancreas Small intestine Large intestine Rectum Stomach Gall- bladder A schematic diagram of the human digestive system Esophagus Salivary glands Mouth Digestive Compartments Mammalian alimentary canal and accessory glands that secrete digestive juices through ducts

18 Larynx Trachea Epiglottis up Pharynx Tongue Glottis Esophagus Esophageal sphincter contracted Food To stomach To lungs Epiglottis down Esophageal sphincter relaxed Glottis up and closed Epiglottis up Esophageal sphincter contracted Sphincter relaxed Relaxed muscles Contracted muscles Relaxed muscles Stomach Glottis down and open Oral Cavity, Pharynx, Esophagus Food shaped into a bolus, lubricated by saliva, digestion begins with amylase. Pharynx, a junction that opens to both the esophagus and the trachea (windpipe) The esophagus conducts food from the pharynx down to the stomach by peristalsis Epiglottis blocks entry to the trachea, and larynx.

19 Digestion in the Stomach The stomach stores food and secretes gastric juice, which converts a meal to acid chyme Gastric juice - hydrochloric acid and the enzyme pepsin Mucus protects the stomach lining from gastric juice Interior surface of stomach Esophagus Chief cells Small intestine Epithelium Stomach Sphincter Parietal cell Chief cell Folds of epithelial tissue Pepsin Sphincter Pepsinogen HCl H+H+ Cl – Parietal cells Mucus cells Gastric gland µm

20 Digestion in the Small Intestine The small intestine: longest section of alimentary canal Major organ of digestion and absorption First is the duodenum - acid chyme from the stomach mixes with digestive juices from the pancreas, liver, gallbladder, and the small intestine itself. pancreas proteases trypsin & chymotrypsin, protein-digesting enzymes neutralizes the acidic chyme liver/gallbladder bile aids digestion and absorption of fats small intestine lining of duodenum (brush border) produces several digestive enzymes jejunum and ileum mainly absorb water & nutrients

21 Oral cavity, pharynx, esophagus Stomach Lumen of small intestine Epithelium of small intestine (brush border) Carbohydrate digestion Polysaccharides Smaller polysaccharides, maltose Polysaccharides Maltose and other disaccharides Disaccharides Protein digestionNucleic acid digestionFat digestion Proteins Small polypeptides Pepsin Pancreatic amylases Salivary amylase Disaccharidases Monosaccharides Small peptides Amino acids Polypeptides Smaller polypeptides Pancreatic trypsin and chymotrypsin Pancreatic carboxypeptidase Dipeptidases, carboxypeptidase, and aminopeptidase DNA, RNA Pancreatic nucleases Fat globules Nucleotides Fat droplets Nucleosides Nitrogenous bases, sugars, phosphates Nucleotidases Nucleosidases and phosphatases Glycerol, fatty acids, monoglycerides Bile salts Pancreatic lipase (starch, glycogen)(sucrose, lactose)

22 Absorption in the Small Intestine small intestine has huge surface area, from villi and microvilli exposed to the intestinal lumen enormous microvillar surface greatly increases rate of nutrient absorption Muscle layers Microvilli (brush border) at apical (lumenal) surface Vein carrying blood to hepatic portal vein Villi Intestinal wall Key Nutrient absorption Large circular folds Blood capillaries Epithelial cells Villi Lymph vessel Basal surface Lacteal Epithelial cells Lumen

23 Absorption in the Large Intestine The colon of the large intestine is connected to the small intestine The cecum aids in fermentation of plant material, connects where the small and large intestines meet Human cecum has extension (appendix), plays a minor role in immunity Feces stored in rectum until eliminated

24 The colon houses strains of the bacterium Escherichia coli, some of which produce vitamins Two sphincters between the rectum and anus control bowel movements

25 Herbivores generally have longer alimentary canals than carnivores, reflecting the longer time needed to digest vegetation Cecum Small intestine HerbivoreCarnivore Colon (large intestine) Stomach Small intestine Adaptations

26 Mutualistic Adaptations Many herbivores have symbiotic microorganisms that digest cellulose The most elaborate adaptations in ruminants Esophagus Omasum Abomasum Intestine Rumen Reticulum

27 Energy Sources and Stores Animals store excess calories as glycogen in the liver and muscles Energy secondarily stored as adipose, or fat, cells When fewer calories are taken in than are expended, fuel is taken from storage and oxidized 100 µm Fat cells Obesity is due to excessive intake of food energy, excess stored as fat Obesity contributes to diabetes (type 2), cancer of the colon and breasts, heart attacks, and strokes

28 Homeostasis: 90 mg glucose/ 100 mL blood Stimulus: Blood glucose level rises after eating. Stimulus: Blood glucose level drops below set point.

29 Leptin PYY Insulin Ghrelin Energy Sources and Stores The complexity of weight control in humans is evident from studies of the hormone leptin Mice that inherit a defect in the gene for leptin become very obese

30 Obese mouse with mutant ob gene (left) next to wild-type sibling mouse.

31 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 high-fat food, chicks need to consume more calories than they burn

32 Figure A plump petrel

33 Lecture 13 concepts - Name the three nutritional needs that must be met by diet - Describe the four classes of essential nutrients - Distinguish among undernourishment, overnourishment, and malnourishment - Describe the four main stages of food processing - Distinguish between complete digestive tracts and gastrovascular cavities - Follow a meal through the mammalian digestive system: List important enzymes and describe their roles Compare where and how the major types of macromolecules are digested and absorbed - Explain where and in what form energy-rich molecules may be stored in the human body -Make a list of new vocabulary with definitions.