Effect of cecectomy on water and nutrient absorption of birds

The effect of the removal of the avian digestive ceca on osmoregulation and on absorption of certain nutrients is reviewed. While data indicate that the ceca have the potential for absorption of a significant quantity of water, several studies have demonstrated that effects of cecectomy on water int...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of experimental zoology 1989, Vol.252 (S3), p.81-86
1. Verfasser: Chaplin, Susan B.
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description The effect of the removal of the avian digestive ceca on osmoregulation and on absorption of certain nutrients is reviewed. While data indicate that the ceca have the potential for absorption of a significant quantity of water, several studies have demonstrated that effects of cecectomy on water intake and output are transitory and that compensatory adjustments made within 2 to 3 weeks postsurgery allow cecectomized birds to eat and gain weight normally. However, cecectomized great horned owls exposed to 27°C turned over their body water 1.6 times faster than intact owls under the same conditions, suggesting that the ceca do have a vital role in water balance of thermally stressed horned owls. Cecectomy resulted in slightly lower metabolizability of food, lower digestibility of crude fiber in low fiber diets, and greater loss of certain amino acids in cecectomized birds that were fasted or fed a protein‐free diet. The latter suggests that the ceca are important in recovery of amino acids from endogenous protein degradation. Loss of cecal function also resulted in higher energy intake and excretion in Japanese quail, amounting to 5.7% of the total daily energy requirement.
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Absorption
Animals
Birds - metabolism
Body Weight
Cecum - metabolism
Cecum - surgery
Dietary Fiber - metabolism
Digestion
Energy Metabolism
Fatty Acids, Volatile - metabolism
Nitrogen - metabolism
Water - pharmacokinetics
Water-Electrolyte Balance
title Effect of cecectomy on water and nutrient absorption of birds
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