Animal Nutrition
Vocabulary:
Nutrition: The process by which an animal takes in nutrients and eventually uses them
Compartmentalization: The sectioning off of areas and systems within an organism
Glucose: Essential sugar that plants and animals use to extract chemical energy to synthesize ATP
Essential nutrients: Nutrients required by cells that can only be obtained from dietary sources, cannot by synthesized by the body
Essential amino acids: the ones the body cannot synthesize, typically come from animal products
Essential fatty acids: Generally unsaturated, obtained through seeds, grains, and vegetables
Vitamins: Organic molecules required in the diet in tiny amounts, over 13 essential
Fat-soluble: Soluble in fat, stay in the body for longer and thus easier to over-consume, A D E and K
Water-soluble: Soluble in water, B 1 2 3 5 6 7 9 12 and C
Minerals: Inorganic molecules, also required in small amounts, typically salts. Examples are Fe, Ca Mg, F, K, P, S, Na, I
Macronutrients: Required in large amounts
Micronutrients: Needed only in small amounts
Opportunistic feeder: Despite something being a carnivore/herbivore, if something is available it will go outside of its normal eating range
Overnourishment: Obesity, too many calories with excess fat
Undernourishment: Starvation, not enough calories, when the body breaks down its own tissue to survive
Malnourishment: Enough calories are consumed, but a diet lacks one or more essential nutrients. This is the hardest to detect and understand
Deficiency: Can cause deformity, disease, and death. Caused by malnutrition of various nutrients
Mechanical digestion: Physically chewing food
Chemical digestion: Using enzymes to hydrolyze food into more broken down forms, breaks polymers into monomers or smaller molecules, down into fatty acids, simple sugars, and amino acids
Absorption: Absorption of nutrients
Elimination: The process of getting rid of excess waste eaten after it is broken down and the nutrients are taken from it
Pharynx: Part of both the digestive and respiratory system
Esophageal sphincter: Flap, when relaxed good can go down, when closed (up far) air can go in and out of the lungs
Peristalsis: The rhythmic movement of smooth muscles, this is the reason food can be swallowed upside down, happens due to many muscle contractions and relaxations involuntarily
Villi: Folds within the intestines, increase surface area and are lined with epithelial cells
Microvilli: line the epithelial cells of the villi, also ups surface area
Mucosa: Inner lining of the intestines that secretes mucus, better allows for absorption
Chylomicrons: Package non-water soluble fats into lipoproteins, they first enter a lacteal of a lymphatic system then into the veins of the circulatory system
Liver: Absorbs toxins, adjusts nutrient contents, monitors blood content
Gastrovascular cavity: Takes care of digestion and circulation for simpler organisms, known as an incomplete digestive system. They have only one opening, and organisms are smaller
Complete digestive system: has two openings, many shapes, structures, and functions of various organs
Crop: Stores food
Gizzard: Grinds food
Carnivore: Eat meat, have sharp teeth for tearing through food, have canines. They can expand their stomachs
Herbivore: Eat plants, incisors are modified to bite off vegetation, better for grinding food. They have longer digestive systems that carnivores, and much larger cecums. This increased the processing of poor-protein foods, meaning they get more from what little is in plants. Most of the diet consists of cellulose
Omnivores: Eat all kinds of food, generally unspecialized teeth
Rumenate: Circulate food for long periods of time, use microorganisms to digest plant fibers, this occurs in the rumen
Glycogen: Preferred form of energy storage, make from excess energy, a polymer of glucose, short-term as opposed to long term
Fat: Long-term energy storage
Glucagon: Allows for glycogen breakdown, produced by alpha cells in pancreas
Insulin: Allows for the storage of glucose, rises with high carbohydrate and protein diets, produced by beta cells in the pancreas, suppresses appetite
Hepatic portal vein: Senses levels of glucose, low levels is when glucagon levels rises which then increases blood sugar levels
Ghrelin: The hormone that when secreted creates a feeling of hunger
Leptin: Hormone produced by adipose tissue, suppresses appetite
An animal diet includes:
Glucose
Things that are used as building blocks
Essential nutrients (amino acids, fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals)
Feeding mechanisms:
Suspension feeders: Filter feeders, example being massive blue whales that filter feed on small crustaceans
Substrate feeders: Eat what they live one, like a caterpillar eating the leaf its on
Fluid feeders: Draw fluid from a host, which contains nutrients. These are often carriers of diseases, an example is an aphid or mosquito
Bulk feeders: Eat a BUNCH at once, like a snake that eats once every 2 weeks, or even humans
Digestive system:
Chemical digestion done by saliva excreted from glands, contains amylase that breaks down carbohydrates
Mechanical digestion starts in the mouth with teeth that tear and grind food
In the stomach there is no carbohydrate digestion, focus is on the proteins
Mechanical digestion in the stomach crushes food
The stomach is acidic, allowing the enzymes like pepsin to break down proteins
The stomach also has esophageal sphincters
Bile excreted from the liver helps emulsify fats, which makes the job of the enzymes easier
The intestine uses peristaltic waves to move food
Amino acids and sugars go directly into capillaries once broken down
Things that cannot be digested, like fiber, move on to the large intestine, where they are stored before they are eliminated. Here, additional water is reabsorbed
Vertebrates cannot digest cellulose, so bacteria is used in symbiosis
Diabetes:
Homeostatic range is 70-110 mg of glucose in 100 mL of blood
Mellitus:
Caused by insulin deficiency, or lower response from target cells
Insulin insensitivity
Cells can’t use glucose as efficiently, rely on fat more prominently
Instead of in cells, the glucose ends up in blood, which is too much for the kidneys to handle, leading to increased levels of glucose in urine
Type 2 diabetes
Heredity is a large factor
Can be caused by overnourishment
Type 1
Autoimmune disorder
Can be caused by viral infection
Occurs when the immune system destroys pancreatic beta cells, halting the production of insulin
Appears in childhood
Treated with insulin injections
Enzymes in the digestive system break down nutrients, this area is acidic
Organisms can synthesize 20 amino acids, the rest are essential
Consequences of amino acid deficiency includes the halting of translation of proteins, resulting in an overall deficiency
Vocabulary:
Nutrition: The process by which an animal takes in nutrients and eventually uses them
Compartmentalization: The sectioning off of areas and systems within an organism
Glucose: Essential sugar that plants and animals use to extract chemical energy to synthesize ATP
Essential nutrients: Nutrients required by cells that can only be obtained from dietary sources, cannot by synthesized by the body
Essential amino acids: the ones the body cannot synthesize, typically come from animal products
Essential fatty acids: Generally unsaturated, obtained through seeds, grains, and vegetables
Vitamins: Organic molecules required in the diet in tiny amounts, over 13 essential
Fat-soluble: Soluble in fat, stay in the body for longer and thus easier to over-consume, A D E and K
Water-soluble: Soluble in water, B 1 2 3 5 6 7 9 12 and C
Minerals: Inorganic molecules, also required in small amounts, typically salts. Examples are Fe, Ca Mg, F, K, P, S, Na, I
Macronutrients: Required in large amounts
Micronutrients: Needed only in small amounts
Opportunistic feeder: Despite something being a carnivore/herbivore, if something is available it will go outside of its normal eating range
Overnourishment: Obesity, too many calories with excess fat
Undernourishment: Starvation, not enough calories, when the body breaks down its own tissue to survive
Malnourishment: Enough calories are consumed, but a diet lacks one or more essential nutrients. This is the hardest to detect and understand
Deficiency: Can cause deformity, disease, and death. Caused by malnutrition of various nutrients
Mechanical digestion: Physically chewing food
Chemical digestion: Using enzymes to hydrolyze food into more broken down forms, breaks polymers into monomers or smaller molecules, down into fatty acids, simple sugars, and amino acids
Absorption: Absorption of nutrients
Elimination: The process of getting rid of excess waste eaten after it is broken down and the nutrients are taken from it
Pharynx: Part of both the digestive and respiratory system
Esophageal sphincter: Flap, when relaxed good can go down, when closed (up far) air can go in and out of the lungs
Peristalsis: The rhythmic movement of smooth muscles, this is the reason food can be swallowed upside down, happens due to many muscle contractions and relaxations involuntarily
Villi: Folds within the intestines, increase surface area and are lined with epithelial cells
Microvilli: line the epithelial cells of the villi, also ups surface area
Mucosa: Inner lining of the intestines that secretes mucus, better allows for absorption
Chylomicrons: Package non-water soluble fats into lipoproteins, they first enter a lacteal of a lymphatic system then into the veins of the circulatory system
Liver: Absorbs toxins, adjusts nutrient contents, monitors blood content
Gastrovascular cavity: Takes care of digestion and circulation for simpler organisms, known as an incomplete digestive system. They have only one opening, and organisms are smaller
Complete digestive system: has two openings, many shapes, structures, and functions of various organs
Crop: Stores food
Gizzard: Grinds food
Carnivore: Eat meat, have sharp teeth for tearing through food, have canines. They can expand their stomachs
Herbivore: Eat plants, incisors are modified to bite off vegetation, better for grinding food. They have longer digestive systems that carnivores, and much larger cecums. This increased the processing of poor-protein foods, meaning they get more from what little is in plants. Most of the diet consists of cellulose
Omnivores: Eat all kinds of food, generally unspecialized teeth
Rumenate: Circulate food for long periods of time, use microorganisms to digest plant fibers, this occurs in the rumen
Glycogen: Preferred form of energy storage, make from excess energy, a polymer of glucose, short-term as opposed to long term
Fat: Long-term energy storage
Glucagon: Allows for glycogen breakdown, produced by alpha cells in pancreas
Insulin: Allows for the storage of glucose, rises with high carbohydrate and protein diets, produced by beta cells in the pancreas, suppresses appetite
Hepatic portal vein: Senses levels of glucose, low levels is when glucagon levels rises which then increases blood sugar levels
Ghrelin: The hormone that when secreted creates a feeling of hunger
Leptin: Hormone produced by adipose tissue, suppresses appetite
An animal diet includes:
Glucose
Things that are used as building blocks
Essential nutrients (amino acids, fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals)
Feeding mechanisms:
Suspension feeders: Filter feeders, example being massive blue whales that filter feed on small crustaceans
Substrate feeders: Eat what they live one, like a caterpillar eating the leaf its on
Fluid feeders: Draw fluid from a host, which contains nutrients. These are often carriers of diseases, an example is an aphid or mosquito
Bulk feeders: Eat a BUNCH at once, like a snake that eats once every 2 weeks, or even humans
Digestive system:
Chemical digestion done by saliva excreted from glands, contains amylase that breaks down carbohydrates
Mechanical digestion starts in the mouth with teeth that tear and grind food
In the stomach there is no carbohydrate digestion, focus is on the proteins
Mechanical digestion in the stomach crushes food
The stomach is acidic, allowing the enzymes like pepsin to break down proteins
The stomach also has esophageal sphincters
Bile excreted from the liver helps emulsify fats, which makes the job of the enzymes easier
The intestine uses peristaltic waves to move food
Amino acids and sugars go directly into capillaries once broken down
Things that cannot be digested, like fiber, move on to the large intestine, where they are stored before they are eliminated. Here, additional water is reabsorbed
Vertebrates cannot digest cellulose, so bacteria is used in symbiosis
Diabetes:
Homeostatic range is 70-110 mg of glucose in 100 mL of blood
Mellitus:
Caused by insulin deficiency, or lower response from target cells
Insulin insensitivity
Cells can’t use glucose as efficiently, rely on fat more prominently
Instead of in cells, the glucose ends up in blood, which is too much for the kidneys to handle, leading to increased levels of glucose in urine
Type 2 diabetes
Heredity is a large factor
Can be caused by overnourishment
Type 1
Autoimmune disorder
Can be caused by viral infection
Occurs when the immune system destroys pancreatic beta cells, halting the production of insulin
Appears in childhood
Treated with insulin injections
Enzymes in the digestive system break down nutrients, this area is acidic
Organisms can synthesize 20 amino acids, the rest are essential
Consequences of amino acid deficiency includes the halting of translation of proteins, resulting in an overall deficiency