Physiology of Digestion in the Macropodine Marsupials

Title
Physiology of Digestion in the Macropodine Marsupials
Publication Date
1980
Author(s)
Dellow, David William
Hume, I D
Sutherland, T M
Type of document
Thesis Doctoral
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
UNE publication id
une:18679
Abstract
The macropodines (kangaroos and wallabies) are herbivorous marsupials with a digestive system comparable to the ruminants. Ingested food is subjected to extensive microbial fermentation and modification in a capacious forestomach and secondary fermentation occurs in the caecum-proximal colon. The macropodine stomach is essentially a long tubular structure, markedly different to that of the ruminants, and relationships between stomach structure and digesta flow have not been previously investigated. Similarly, little is known of the mode of microbial activity in the forestomach and quantitative estimates of the extent of microbial fermentation have not been reported. The present comparative study was undertaken to examine some of these aspects of the physiology of fermentative digestion in three macropodine species; 'Thylogale thetis' (red-necked pademelon), 'Macropus giganteus' (eastern grey kangaroo) and 'Macropus eugenii' (tammar wallaby). These species represent adaptation to widely different habitats. Reference was also made to other macropodine species and some direct comparisons were made with sheep.
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