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Gross intestinal morphometry and allometry in ruminants.

Amanda McGrosky1, Daryl Codron2, Dennis W H Müller3,4

  • 1Department of Anthropology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

Journal of Morphology
|June 27, 2019
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Ruminant intestinal length does not reflect diet but may indicate adaptation to arid environments. Body mass influences gut size, with larger animals having proportionally longer intestines.

Keywords:
digestionfeeding typefluid throughputomasumruminant

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Area of Science:

  • Comparative anatomy
  • Ruminant physiology
  • Evolutionary biology

Background:

  • Traditional views link ruminant intestinal length to diet (grass vs. browse).
  • This assumption has been challenged, necessitating a re-evaluation of factors influencing gut morphology.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the relationship between ruminant intestinal length, body mass, diet, digestive physiology, and climate.
  • To test the hypothesis that intestinal length is primarily an indicator of feeding strategy.

Main Methods:

  • Compiled data on body mass and intestinal segment lengths (small intestine, caecum, colon/rectum, large intestine, total intestine) for 68 ruminant species.
  • Analyzed allometric scaling of intestinal length with body mass, controlling for phylogenetic relationships.
  • Assessed the influence of diet, digestive physiology proxies, and climate proxies on intestinal length measures.

Main Results:

  • Intestinal length scaled to body mass with an exponent higher than predicted by geometric principles.
  • Diet or digestive physiology proxies showed no significant influence on intestinal length.
  • Aridity proxies positively correlated with large intestine length.
  • Omasum size was negatively correlated with overall intestinal length.

Conclusions:

  • Ruminant intestinal length is not a reliable indicator of feeding type or digestive physiology.
  • Intestinal length appears to be more indicative of adaptations to arid habitats.
  • The observed scaling suggests a need to maintain intestinal surface area while minimizing gut diameter, potentially impacting diffusion distances.