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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Extracellular digestion in two intertidal mussels and the role played by their gut bacteria

Simon, Carol Anne January 1997 (has links)
The intertidal mussels. Perna perna and Choromytilus meridionalis co-occur on the southern coast of South Africa. Mussels ingest mixtures of bacteria. phytoplankton. zooplankton and detritus. with proportions varying according to availability. These bivalves filter similar-sized particles. which might result in interspecific competition. Carbohydrate-digesting enzymes of the mussels and their enteric bacteria. and bacteriolytic enzymes of the mussels were therefore examined to elucidate feeding ecology in these animals at an enzymatic level. Style enzymes of both species digested the storage carbohydrates amylose glycogen and laminarin, and the structural carbohydrate carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC). Differential rates of digestion of these carbohydrates suggests that Perna perna relies more on plankton (and possibly bacteria) than on detritus for food while Choromytilus meridionalis relies equally on all components of the seston. There may therefore be some degree of resource partitioning of the seston. The styles of P.perna had a lower specific enzyme activity. but higher protein content than those of C.meridionalis. P.perna could therefore release more glucose from a given concentration of substrate than C.meridionalis. The gut contents and tissue were examined microscopically to determine where the bacterial colonisation sites were. Bacteria were associated primarily with the gut contents but not the gut walls. of both species. The styles housed spirochaete bacteria (Crislispira sp), Perna perna housed large numbers of one species. while Choromytilus meridionalis had lower numbers of two species. Levels of infection differed between species and localities. Enteric (but not style) bacteria of Perna perna and Choromytilus meridionalis always digested the same carbohydrates as the mussels as well as the structural carbohydrates mannan and fucoidan. Activity was erratic on the structural compounds, carageenin and xylan, and absent on alginic acid or inulin. Activity on the storage carbohydrates by enteric bacteria from C.meridionalis was higher than by those from P.perna. This is probably related to the larger bacterial populations housed by C.meridionalis than by P.perna. Bacteriolytic activity by the digestive enzymes of Pema perna was higher than for Choromytilus. In P.perna it was due to a combination of different enzymes one of which is a true lysozyme. C.meridionalis did not produce a true lysozyme. Enzymes produced by the mussels and their enteric bacteria allow the mussels to utilise all components of the seston. Low endogenous enzyme activity by Choromytilus meridionalis, coupled with the high activity by its enteric bacteria, suggests that they rely more on bacterial activity to meet their dietary requirements than does Perna perna. The ability of enteric bacteria to digest carbohydrates which the mussels cannot indicates that the bacteria are endosymbiotic, although the sporadic nature of activity of some of the enzymes, and the fact that bacteria are associated with the gut contents, indicates that the relationship is only incidental.
2

The anatomy of the alimentary tract of the javelina Tayassu tajacu

Stewart, John Alden, 1904- January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
3

The anatomy of the alimentary tract of three genera of bats

Brown, Robert Harrison, 1938- January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
4

Digesta passage rates in the rat

Luick, Bret R. 07 December 1990 (has links)
The movements of digestion markers in the gut of the rat were investigated and the results of the investigation are reported in two manuscripts. The objective of the first study was to determine the influence of particle size of dietary wheat bran, chosen as a representative insoluble fiber, on the mean retention time (MRT) of digesta in the rat. The study design included a control group to detect the influence of particle size of digestion marker on the observed retention times. Additionally, a comparison was made between bran and the soluble fiber pectin. Both the soluble cobalt EDTA (Co EDTA) and insoluble chromium mordanted bran (CrMB), of two size ranges were administered to 4 groups of rats fed a semi-purified diet supplemented with wheat bran or pectin (10% dilution). Bran size and particulate marker size were large/large, large/small, small/small and pectin/small for the 4 groups. Mean retention times for CrMB were significantly longer in the pectin than the bran supplemented groups. Differences were not significantly different within the bran supplemented group. No significant differences were found between the rate of passage of CrMB and Co EDTA in any group. The second study was designed to identify pooling of markers in the rat gut. A mathematical model was developed as a system of equations which predicted the marker distribution along the gut following dosing. The model assumed that two pools, the stomach and cecum, were kinetically recognizable in the rat. The predicted distribution of CrMB and Co EDTA was compared to in vivo distribution at 4 h intervals by sequential termination and dissection of the animals. The smaller particle bran had a longer MRT in the cecum and a shorter MRT in the proximal colon. Total MRT to the mid-colon was similar in all bran supplemented groups. Pectin fed animals had significantly enlarged gut organs which explained the slower movement of marker in these animals. The cecum was found to delay the transit of marker from the small intestine to the proximal colon as much as 2.1 h. This delay resulted in the gut appearing as a single pool overall and therefore led the model to overpredict the initial rate of appearance of marker distal to the cecum. A streamlined system was developed to digest the fecal samples in preparation for atomic absorption spectroscopy, the method used to quantify digestion marker recovery. The development of the method is discussed and supporting data are presented on the reproducibility and limits of the method. / Graduation date: 1991
5

Ecologie alimentaire des Macrouridae (Téléostéens gadiformes) alimentation, morphologie et histologie de l'appareil digestif : place des Macrouridae dans la chaîne alimentaire profonde.

Geistdoerfer, Patrick. January 1975 (has links)
Thesis--Université de Paris. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 287-308).
6

The distribution of the blood vessels to the postdiaphragmatic digestive tract of five mature female goats /

Horowitz, Aaron January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
7

Role of wingless signalling in Drosophila midgut homeostasis

Fang, Hsiao Yu January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
8

Transpyloric flow and associated motility in health and following pharmacologic modulation /

Kwiatek, Monika Agnieszka. Unknown Date (has links)
Transpyloric flow is the final step in gastric emptying prior to intestinal absorption of nutrients and medications. The details of this process are still incompletely understood. Transpyloric flow is bi-directional, contrasting with the general perception of solely forward flow implied by studies of gross gastric emptying. The degree to which the patterns of bi-directional transpyloric flow reflect emptying of meals of varied physicochemical composition, its mechanical determinants and effect on delivery of oral medications have been evaluated by the studies presented in this thesis. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2006.
9

The alimentary canal of the larva of the alder fleabeetle ...

Woods, William Colcord, January 1900 (has links)
Pt. II of Thesis (Ph. D.)--Cornell University, 1917. / "Reprinted from the Annals of the Entomological society of America, vol. XI, no. 3, September, 1918." Published in 2 parts. "Part I of this thesis entitled 'The biology of the alder flea-beetle, ' is reprinted from Bulletin 265 of the Maine agricultural station." "Literature cited": p. 311.
10

Contributions to the physiology of digestion in the Australian roach, Periplaneta australasiae Fab

Abbott, Roy Linn, January 1900 (has links)
Presented as Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1925. / "Reprinted from the Journal of experimental zoölogy, vol. 44., April, 1926." Includes bibliographical references (p. 248-249).

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