Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition. Types of Feeders Suspension feeders sift through water to obtain small food particles Fluid feeders suck nutrients from a.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ch 39 Nutrition, Digestion and absoption
Advertisements

Animal Nutrition Chapter 41.
The Digestive System.
Ch. 41. Need to Feed Animal nutrition Food being taken in, taken apart, and taken up Herbivores Dine mainly on plants Carnivores Dine mainly on other.
Chapter 30.3: The Digestive System
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.
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM.
CHAPTER 21 Nutrition and Digestion
NUTRITION AND DIGESTION
Digestive System Notes. Mouth Carbohydrate digestion begins here! Ingestion = eating.
Nutrition and Digestion
The Digestive System The mysterious process uncovered!
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition. I. Homeostasis and Nutrition.
Animal Nutrition. nutrition Food taken in, taken apart and taken up Herbivores – plants/algae Carnivores – eat other animals Omnivores – consume animals.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition.
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.
Digestive System I’m from Chiquita banana & I’m here to say, I’ve got a recipe for you today. You take a banana & you shove it down, You wait a few minutes.
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition. Nutritional requirements Undernourishment: caloric deficiency Overnourishment (obesity): excessive food intake Malnourishment:
The Digestive System.
The Digestive System.
Chapter 41: Animal Nutrition By Josh Ivanir. Overview Three main categories that animals fall in: -Herbivores: eat mainly autotrophs (plants and algae)
Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition By: Ashley Kelch, Melanie Diaz, Joy Chao.
Digestive System. Humans as Heterotrophs Hetero=another Trophe= nutrition As heterotrophs we cannot create carbon, therefore we need to ingest carbon.
Most animals ingest chunks of food
36-2 The Digestive System. Digestive Tract Alimentary canal –one way passage through the body Function: –to convert food into simple molecules that can.
When Human Digestive System becomes A luxury tour is waiting for U Duodenum Dynamics Ad Agency© Disneyland…
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.
The Digestive System Chapter 45. Animals are heterotrophs Require fuel –Chemical energy is obtained from the oxidation of complex organic molecules Require.
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM. DIGESTIVE SYSTEM 4 Stages of Food Processing INGESTIONAct of eating and drinking DIGESTION (2 Types) Process of breaking down food into.
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.
1 Chapter 41 ~ Animal Nutrition. 2 Food types/feeding mechanisms Opportunistic Herbivore: eat autotrophs Carnivore: eat other animals Omnivore: both Feeding.
Your Digestive System The main role of the digestive system is to break down and absorb nutrients that are necessary for growth and maintenance.
DIGESTION.
Digestion: Obtaining & Processing Food Herbivores = plant-eaters Herbivores = plant-eaters Carnivores = meat-eaters Carnivores = meat-eaters Omnivores.
 Create a cluster diagram of everything you know about the digestive system.  DO NOT USE YOUR BOOK!!!!!!  You must include at 5 facts but you can include.
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:
Fuel Storage Glucose is major fuel Stored in the liver, and excess is stored as fat.Stored in the liver, and excess is stored as fat. Diet needs essential.
CHAPTER 38 DIGESTIVE & EXCRETORY SYSTEMS **Only responsible for knowing YELLOW and RED terms/concepts* DIGESTIVE & EXCRETORY SYSTEMS **Only responsible.
The Digestive System.
Lecture #18 Date ______ Chapter 41 ~ Animal Nutrition.
Parts of the Human Digestive System Alimentary canal: Long tube like structure. u Mouth u Tongue u Pharynx (throat) u Esophagus u Stomach u Small intestine.
Functions of the Digestive System  The digestive system converts food into small molecules that can be used by the cells of the body.  Food is processed.
Chapter 41: Animal Nutrition. Animals are heterotrophs that require food for fuel, carbon skeletons, and essential nutrients.
6.1 Digestion Readings IB Pg Overview: The Need to Feed Heterotrophs –dependent on a regular supply of food Animals fall into three categories:
Digestive System Chapter 41. What you need to know!  The major compartments of the alimentary canal – oral cavity, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small.
 Why eat?  We are _________ because we need to obtain food from an outside source. What are the three kinds of these?  Are we locked into this label.
Animal Nutrition Ch. 41 Lecture Objectives Importance of Food
Allison Wetshtein Jessica Wetshtein
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
WARM-UP (Ch. 40) What is the principle of countercurrent exchange?
Animal Nutrition.
INTRO TO INTERNAL SYSTEMS
Animal Nutrition.
Chapter 41 – Animal Nutrition
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.
Animal Nutrition Chapter 41.
Chapter 41- Animal Nutrition
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 41 Animal Nutrition

Types of Feeders Suspension feeders sift through water to obtain small food particles Fluid feeders suck nutrients from a host Substrate feeders live on their food sources Bulk feeders eat large pieces of food

Nutritional Needs

To function properly an animal needs to consume… Fuel. Organic raw materials for biosynthesis. Essential nutrients which can’t be synthesized through biosynthesis.

Fuel Animals synthesize ATP from other fuel sources and use ATP to power many bodily functions. Animals oxidize carbohydrates, fats, and proteins in that order as fuel for ATP synthesis. Severe situations regarding fuel consumption are… –Undernourishment, a prolonged caloric deficit. –Overnourishment (obesity), a prolongued surplus of fat in a diet

Raw Organic Materials An Animal needs to synthesize complex chemicals needed to function. This is called biosynthesis. Carbon skeletons and sources of organic nitrogen are necessary to synthesize these molecules These are readily available in the environment

Essential Nutrients Essential Nutrients are important to bodily function but cannot be synthesized by the animal. An animal’s diet must provide these. –Essential amino acids: 8 different monomers necessary for protein synthesis –Essential fatty acids: Certain unsaturated fatty acids. –Vitamins: 13 different organic molecules which have a wide array of bodily uses. They can be either water soluble or fat soluble. –Minerals: Inorganic compounds Malnutrition arises when an animal lacks essential nutrients.

Regulation Glucose Regulation is controlled by the antagonistic hormones insulin and glucagon. –Insulin: Stimulates blood glucose levels to drop –Glucagon: Stimulates blood glucose levels to rise Hunger Regulation is controlled by four hormones –Leptin, Insulin, and PYY suppress appetite –Ghrelin increases appetite

Food Processing

Step 1: Ingestion of nutrients Step 2: Digestion of macromolecules Step 3: Absorption of monomers Step 4: Elimination of undigested waste

Types of Digestion Intracellular digestion occurs when food is digested in the vacuoles of cells Extracellular digestion occurs when some food is digested in designated cavities outside of cells. There are two types of digestive cavities –The gastrovascular cavity is a sac with a single opening –The complete digestive tract (alimentary canal) has two openings. Food only moves in one direction. This cavity contains more specialized compartments for digestion. Hydrolytic Enzymes break down polymers and are used in all types of digestion

The Mammalian Digestive Tract

The Oral Cavity, Pharynx, and Esophagus During chewing in the oral cavity, salivary amylase helps break down carbohydrates After chewing the tongue shapes the food into a bolus The food is swallowed into the Pharynx (throat) next –The Pharynx opens to the trachea and esophagus The epiglottis covers the trachea when swallowing Peristalsis (rhythmic smooth muscle contraction) moves the food down the esophagus

The Stomach A sphincter called the cardiac orifice regulates entrance to the stomach. The stomach secretes gastric juice. –This mixes with the food to form acid chyme. The acidity of the gastric juice activates the hydrolytic enzyme pepsin The pyloric sphincter regulates flow of acid chyme into the small intestine

The Small Intestine The first 25 cm of this is the duodenum. In the duodenum… –Juices from the Pancreas buffer the acid chyme. –The liver secretes bile salts to help digest fats –The epithelium contains and secretes hydrolytic enzymes Structures in the epithelium called villi and their appendages called microvilli help absorb nutrients –In the villi are capillary beds and lacteals from the circulatory and lymphatic systems respectively –The lacteals drain into larger lymphatic vessels –The capillary beds drain into the hepatic portal vein of the liver

The Large Intestine (Colon) A sphincter in a T-shaped junction controls the entrance into the Large Intestine The colon reabsorbs most of the water which the small intestine left in the mixture Undigested material moves through the colon by way of peristalsis into the rectum –The undigested material is now known as feces and is soon discarded

Evolutionary Adaptations to the Digestive System Carnivores have developed sharper teeth while herbivores have developed broader and more rigid teeth Herbivores have developed longer digestive tracts Herbivores have developed symbiotic relationships with bacteria that digest cellulose