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Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals Dr. Richard Coffey Introduction to Animal and Food Sciences Agent In-Service

Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

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Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals. Dr. Richard Coffey Introduction to Animal and Food Sciences Agent In-Service. I have finally cum to the konklusion that a reliable set ov bowels iz worth more to a man than enny quantity of brains. Josh Billings. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Physiology ofFarm Animals

Dr. Richard Coffey

Introduction to Animal and Food Sciences Agent In-Service

Page 2: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

I have finally cum to the konklusion that a reliable set ov bowels iz worth more to a man than enny quantity of

brains.Josh Billings

Josh billings was a pseudonym for Henry Wheeler Shaw (1818-1885), an American writer that was known for his intentional introduction of misspellings into sketches.

Page 3: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Introduction In simple terms, the digestive system is a portal

for nutrients to gain access to the circulatory system.

►Foodstuffs are broken down to very simple molecules.

►Resulting sugars, amino acids, fatty acids, etc. are

then transported across the GI tract lining into blood.

The specific foodstuffs animals are able to utilize

is dependent on the type of digestive system

they possess.

Page 4: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Introduction

Three (3) basic types of digestive systems:

►Monogastric – simple stomach.

►Ruminant (cranial fermentor) – multi-compartmented

stomach.

►Hind gut (caudal) fermentor – simple stomach, but

very large and complex large intestine

Page 5: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Types of Digestive Systems

Cats

Chickens Pigs

DogsTurkeys

Monogastrics RuminantsHind Gut

Fermentors

Beef Cattle Dairy Cattle

Deer

SheepGoats

Horses

Rabbits

Ostrich

Page 6: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Basic Functional Anatomy of the

Digestive System

– Monogastrics –

Page 7: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Tract - Pig

Esophagus

Stomach

Liver Pancreas

Duodenum

Small intestine (jejunum, ileum)

Cecum

Colon

Rectum

Page 8: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Monogastrics –

Mouth►Mechanical breakdown of foodstuffs by chewing

(reduces particle size, increases surface area for

action of enzymes).

►Saliva added as a lubricant and, in some species,

contains amylase to begin starch digestion.

Esophagus►Tube connecting the mouth to

the stomach.

Page 9: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Monogastrics –

Stomach►Enzymatic digestion of proteins begins.

►Foodstuffs reduced to liquid form.

Liver►Center of metabolic activity in the body.

►Major role in digestive process is to provide bile salts

to small intestine (needed for digestion and

absorption of fats).

Page 10: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Monogastrics –

Pancreas►Provides a potent mixture of digestive enzymes to the

small intestine to help in digestion of fats,

carbohydrates, and proteins.

Small Intestine►3 sections – duodenum, jejunum, ileum

►Site of final stages of chemical enzymatic digestion.

►Where almost all nutrients are absorbed.

Page 11: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Monogastrics –

Large Intestine►3 sections – cecum, colon, rectum

►Site of water absorption from G.I. tract.

►Bacterial fermentation occurs (production and

absorption of volatile fatty acids).Somewhat limited in monogastrics

►Feces formed.

Page 12: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Tract - Poultry

Esophagus

Crop

Proventriculus

GizzardLiver

Gall bladder

Cecum

Cloaca

Large intestine

Small intestine (jejunum, ileum)

Pancreas

Duodenum

Page 13: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Monogastrics –

Specialized Organs in Poultry

Beak►No lips, no teeth, and no chewing.

Crop►Out-pocketing of the esophagus that provides storage

for consumed food.

►Foodstuffs moistened and softened (little if any

digestion).

Page 14: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Monogastrics –

Specialized Organs in Poultry (continued)

Proventriculus►Glandular stomach where the first significant

amount of digestive juices are added.

Gizzard►A muscular organ used to grind and break

up food.

►May contain grit (small stones) eaten by

animal.

Page 15: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Monogastrics –

Specialized Organs in Poultry (continued)

Cloaca►Common chamber into which the digestive, urinary,

and reproductive tracts open.When fecal material is excreted, the cloaca

folds back at the vent allowing the rectal

opening of the large intestine to push out,

closing the reproductive tract opening.

Page 16: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Specialized Poultry Organs

Proventriculus

GizzardCrop

Cloaca

Page 17: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Process - MonogastricsProteins Fats Starch

MOUTH

STOMACH

SMALL INTESTINE

Peptides

proteases

Amino acids

peptidases

Fatty acids

bile salts lipases

Maltose

amylase

Glucose

amylase maltase

= main site of absorption

Page 18: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Basic Functional Anatomy of the

Digestive System

– Ruminants –

Page 19: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Tract – Beef Cattle

Esophagus

Rumen

Omasum

Reticulum

Abomasum

Pancreas

Liver

Gall bladder

Cecum

Small intestine

Large intestine

Rectum

Page 20: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Ruminants –

Mouth, esophagus, liver, pancreas, gall bladder, small intestine, and large intestine have functions similar to monogastrics.

Stomach►Structure and function of the stomach is the major

difference between monogastrics and ruminants.

►Multi-compartmented stomach – rumen, reticulum,

omasum, abomasum.

Page 21: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Rumen:►Large, anaerobic fermentation vat.

Rumen Capacity

Species Normal capacity Maximum capacity

Cow (1000 lb) 25-30 gallons 55-60 gallons

Ewe (150 lb) 3-5 gallons 5-10 gallons

Page 22: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Rumen (continued):

►Houses microorganisms.Protozoa – 100,000 per gram of rumen fluid.

Bacteria/fungi – 100 million per gram of rumen fluid.

►Functions of microorganisms.Digest roughages to make Volatile Fatty Acids (VFA’s), make

microbial protein, and make vitamins K and B-complex.

►VFA’s absorbed in rumen.

Page 23: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Rumen (continued):

►Lined with millions of

papillae (short projections

on wall of rumen) needed

for absorption. “Shag carpet” appearance

Page 24: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Taken from “Digestive Physiology of Herbivores”http://arbl.cvmbs.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/digestion/herbivores/

Rumen (continued):

► Rumen saturated with gases and in constant motion.

► Contractions occur at a rate of 1-3 per minute.Serve to mix contents, aid

in eructation of gases, and move fluid and fermented feedstuffs into the omasum.

Page 25: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Rumination:►Ruminants are well known for “cud chewing”.

►Rumination involves:Bolus of previously eaten foodstuff carried back into the

mouth by reverse peristalsis.Fluid in bolus is squeezed out with the tongue and

reswallowed.Bolus is rechewed and reswallowed.

►Rumination may occupy about 1/3 of a ruminant’s day

Page 26: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Eructation (belching):►Fermentation of foodstuffs in the rumen generates

enormous quantities of gas.30-50 liters per hour in adult cattle.5-7 liters per hour in adult sheep or goats.

►Belching is how ruminants get rid of fermentation gases:Anything that causes a hindrance to belching can be life

threatening.Bloating can result in death from asphyxiation.

Page 27: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Reticulum:

►Contains microorganisms (like the rumen).

►Provides additional area for fermentation.

►As fermentation by microorganisms proceed and

feedstuffs are digested, smaller and more dense

material is pushed into the reticulum (from which it

along with microbe-laden liquid is ejected into the

omasum).

Page 28: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Reticulum (continued):

►Lining has a honeycomb

structure.Catches and holds hardware

consumed by animal.

Hardware can be removed with

rumen magnate.

Page 29: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Omasum:

►A heavy, hard organ with a lining

that has many folds (leaves).

►Function not well understood.Believed to produce a grinding

action on foodstuffs.

May absorb residual VFA’s and

bicarbonate.

Page 30: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Parts of the Ruminant Stomach

Abomasum:►The true, glandular stomach.

Secretes acids and functions very

similarly to monogastric stomach.

►Unique feature is that it secretes

lysozyme.Enzyme that efficiently breaks down

bacterial cell walls.

Needed to break down the large

quantities of bacteria that pass from

the rumen.

Page 31: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Process - RuminantsNonprotein N

(NPN)Feed

proteins FatsCarbohydrates

Cellulose Starches Hemicellulose Sugars

Microbial protein (essential AA)

Volatile fatty acids (VFA’s)

VFA’s

RUMEN/ RETICULUM

RUPMicrobial protein

Peptides

OMASUM

ABOMASUM

SMALL INTESTINE

Peptides

Amino acids

Fats

Fatty acids & glycerol

Glucose

Glucose

RDP

RU

P

LIVER

RD

P

Glucose

= microbial action; = main site of absorption = some absorptionRDP = rumen degraded protein; RUP = rumen undegraded protein;

Page 32: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Basic Functional Anatomy of the Digestive System

– Hind Gut Fermentors –

Page 33: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Tract - Horse

Esophagus

Stomach

Duodenum

Small intestineCecum

Large colon

Small colon

Rectum

Page 34: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Hind Gut Fermentors –

Mouth, esophagus, stomach, liver, pancreas, gall bladder, and small intestine have similar functions as compared to monogastrics.

Large Intestine►Major difference between monogastrics and hind gut

fermentors is the large intestine

►Large intestine is exceptionally large and complex

compared to monogastrics and ruminants.

Page 35: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Organs of the Digestive System– Hind Gut Fermentors –

The large intestine of hind gut fermentors is analogous to the rumen in ruminants.

►Large, anaerobic fermentation vat.

►Microbes digest structural carbohydrates (cellulose,

hemicellulose) and soluble carbohydrates that escape

digestion in small intestine to VFA’s.VFA’s absorbed from large intestine and utilized by the

animal.

►Microbial protein produced in large intestine is wasted

(only very limited absorption from large intestine).

Page 36: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Process – Hind Gut FermentorsProteins Fats Starch

MOUTH

STOMACH

SMALL INTESTINE

LARGE INTESTINE

Peptides

proteases

Amino acids

peptidases

Fatty acids

bile salts lipases

Maltose

amylase

Glucose

amylase maltase

Cellulose Hemicellulose

VFA’s

= microbial action = main site of absorption

VFA’s

Page 37: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Summary

Page 38: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Summary

There are three (3) basic types of digestive systems in farm animal species.►Monogastric

►Ruminant (cranial fermentor)

►Hind gut (caudal fermentor)

The type of digestive system influences the

dietary foodstuffs the animal can effectively

utilize.

Page 39: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive System Comparisons

Function Monogastric RuminantsHind Gut

Fermentors

Digest and extract energy from cellulose

Very limited(large intestine)

Yes(rumen/reticulum)

Yes(large intestine)

Utilize dietary sugar sources directly

Yes(absorbed as glucose)

No(fermented to VFA’s)

Yes(absorbed as glucose)

Utilize protein from feeds directly

Yes Limited(most converted to microbial

protein)

Yes

Utilize fat from feeds directly

Yes Some(most fermented to VFA’s)

Yes

Utilize microbial protein

No Yes(60-80% of AA from microbes)

No

Page 40: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

Digestive Tract CapacitiesSheep/Goats Cattle Swine Horses

Rumen 5-10 gal 55-60 gal ---- ----

Reticulum 1.5 qt 3-4 gal ---- ----

Omasum 1 pt 1-2 gal ---- ----

Abomasum 1.5 qt 3-4 gal ---- ----

Stomach ---- ---- 2 gal 2-3 gal

Small intestine 2.5 gal 17-18 gal 2.5 gal 12-15 gal

Small intestine length

85-90 ft 130 ft 60 ft 70 ft

Large intestine 1.5 gal 10 gal 3 gal 30-35 gal

Page 41: Digestive Physiology of Farm Animals

THE END

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