Author:
Hume I. D.,Smith C.,Woolley P. A.
Abstract
The gastrointestinal tract of the endangered Julia Creek dunnart
(Sminthopsis douglasi), the largest member of the genus
Sminthopsis, consists of a simple, unilocular stomach
and an intestine of relatively uniform calibre throughout. There is no hindgut
caecum, in common with other Australian carnivorous marsupials.
Brunner’s glands form a collar at the proximal end of the duodenum; they
consist of simple uncoiled tubes at Day 45 of pouch life but are well
differentiated at Day 60, before the young take their first solid food at Day
65–70. Rate of passage of digesta was measured in nine adult Julia Creek
dunnarts on diets of minced meat with either mealworm larvae or adult crickets
added, using pulse doses of the solute marker Co–EDTA and large
(0.5–1.0 mm) particles of plant cell walls mordanted with Cr. Transit
time (time of first appearance in the faeces) of both markers (P < 0.001)
and mean retention time (the average time markers are retained in the tract)
of the solute marker (P < 0.05) were shorter on the diet containing
mealworms than the cricket diet. These results suggest that emptying of the
stomach (the main site of digesta retention in carnivores) was delayed on the
cricket diet, possibly because of longer digestion times as a result of a
tougher exoskeleton. Comparison with other data suggests that total tract
passage times increase among dasyurids as body size increases.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献