II: 6.3 - Animal nutrition Flashcards
6.3.1 Diet 6.3.2 Food supply 6.3.3 Human alimentary canal 6.3.4 Mechanical and physical digestion 6.3.5 Chemical digestion 6.3.6 Absorption 6.3.7 Assimilation
Define
balanced diet
A balanced diet is a diet in which all the components needed to maintain health are present in appropriate proportions.
A balanced diet should include appropriate proportions of carbohydrate, protein, lipid, vitamins, minerals, water and dietary fibre.
Describe a balanced diet related to age, sex and activity of an individual
Diet related to age/sex/activity:
- Children Below 12: Require more calcium
- Teenagers: Highest calorie Intake
- Adults: Balanced meal with less calories. The energy needs of adults go down as they age, e.g. people in their 50s need about 17% less energy in their diet than people in their 30s.
- Pregnant Women: more iron, calcium and folic acid
- Males: Generally require more energy
- People who are active tend to need more energy than sedentary people.
- In general, the greater a person’s mass, the more energy they need.
Describe the effects of malnutrition in relation to starvation, coronary heart disease, constipation and obesity
Malnutrition: A condition caused by eating an unbalanced diet. Several forms:
- Overnutrition: balanced diet but eating too much of everything
- Undernutrition: having too little food
- Eating foods in incorrect proportions
- Starvation: losing strength & finally dying because of lack of food
- Coronary heart disease: eating too much fats which are rich in saturated fatty acids and cholesterol, may lead to heart attack
- Constipation: lack of roughages in food causes constipation because roughages are indigestible and form bulks. Friction between bulks and walls of intestine stimulate the peristalsis
- Obesity: Eating too much fats and carbohydrates leads to their storage in storage in the body mainly in the forms of fats and causing an increase in body weight. This can cause; heart attack, stroke, joint pain, mobility impairment, high blood pressure
Discuss ways in which the use of modern technology has resulted in increased food production.
Food production has increased because:
- Improved machinery means less labor is needed
- Fertilisers help crops to grow better
- Insecticides: a type of pesticide that kills insects
- Herbicides: a type of pesticide that kills weeds
- Artificial selection and genetic modification means that yields are improved: cows produce more milk, cows are more muscular giving more meat, plant crops can resist insects and cold weather
Discuss the problems of world food supplies
Not enough food available in a country to feed its people because:
- Fast increase in population
- Increasing use of crops for fuel
- Decrease of farming = Climate change/Urbanization
Discuss the problems which contribute to famine
Famine: Wide spread scarcity of food
The main causes of famine:
- The rapid rate of population increase
- Long term climatic change
- Soil erosion and desertification
- Economic pressure
- Unequal distribution of food
- Drought
- Flood
Define
ingestion
Taking substances (e.g. food, drink) into the body through the mouth
Define
egestion
Passing out of food that has not been digested, as faeces, through the anus
State the name and function of A
Mouth
Contains teeth used for mechanical digestion (chewing), area where food is mixed with salivary amylase & where ingestion takes place
i) Urvula
ii) Tongue: moves food, senses taste
State the function of the epiglottis
When swallowing, the epiglottis closes the trachea so food does not go down this tube.
Swallowing is a reflex action
State the name and function of B
Pharynx
Also known as the throat; the passageway leading from the mouth and nose to the esophagus and larynx
State the name and function of C
Salivary glands
Produces saliva, which contains the enzyme amylase (breaks down cooked starch into maltose and glusoce), helps to lubricate the food and makes the small pieces stick together.
i) Parotid
ii) Subligual
iii) Submandibular
State the name and function of D
Oesophagus
Also known as the gullet; a tube-shaped organ which uses peristalsis to transport food from mouth to stomach
State the name and function of E
Stomach
- Has sphincter muscles to control movement into duodenum
- Has pepsin (a protease) to break down proteins into peptides
- Has renin which clots milk
- Kills bacteria with hydrochloric acid
- Has elastic walls
- The walls of the stomach contain muscles that contract and relax together mixing the food with the content of the stomach and turning it into liquid chyme (this process is called churning).
State the name and function of F
Pancreas
Produces pancreatic juice which contains amylase, trypsin and lipase and hydrogencarbonate.
i) Pancreas duct - transport pancreatic juice to duodenum
Also involved in the regulation of glucose levels (see homeostasis)
State the name and function of G
Liver
- Produces bile
- Stores glucose as glycogen, interconverting them to keep glucose concentration constant
- Carries out interconversion of amino acids (transamination), deammination and removal of old red blood cells and storage of their iron
- Site of breakdown of alcohol and other toxins.
State the name and function of H
Gall bladder
Stores bile from liver
State the name and function of I
Bile duct
Delivers bile to duodenum
State the name and function of J
Small intestine
Tube shaped organ composed of three parts:
i) Duodenum - Fats are emulsified by bile, and digested by pancreatic lipase to form fatty acids and glycerol. Pancreatic amylase and trypsin (a protease) break down starch and peptides into maltose and amino acids. Intestinal juice contains carbohydrases to further break carbohydrates down:
- Maltase to digest maltose into glucose + glucose
- Sucrase to digest sucrose into glucose + fructose
- Lactase to digest lactose into glucose + galactose
ii) Jejunum
iii) Ileum - This is where absorption takes place, adapted by having villi and microvilli to increase internal surface area.