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Pseudoruminant is a classification of animals based on their digestive tract differing from the ruminants. Hippopotami and camels are ungulate mammals with a three-chambered stomach (ruminants have a four-chambered stomach) while equids (horses, asses, zebras) and rhinoceroses are monogastric herbivores. [1] [2]
Digestive system of ruminants [ edit ] Hofmann and Stewart divided ruminants into three major categories based on their feed type and feeding habits: concentrate selectors, intermediate types, and grass/roughage eaters, with the assumption that feeding habits in ruminants cause morphological differences in their digestive systems, including ...
These animals are hindgut fermenters. [9] This means fibrous food material is fermented after the small intestine (in the cecum and/or colon). Small animals (discussed in this article) are classified as cecal fermenters while large animals are colonic fermenters. [10] They all have one stomach (monogastric). [10]
These are subdivided into two groups based on the relative size of various digestive organs in relationship to the rest of the system: colonic fermenters tend to be larger species such as horses and rhinos, and cecal fermenters are smaller animals such as rabbits and rodents. [4]
In cnidarians, the gastrovascular system is also known as the coelenteron, and is commonly known as a "blind gut" or "blind sac", since food enters and waste exits through the same orifice. The radially symmetrical cnidarians have a sac-like body in two distinct layers, the epidermis and gastrodermis , with a jellylike layer called the mesoglea ...
The highly modified parasitic genus Enteroxenos has no digestive tract at all, and simply absorbs the blood of its host through the body wall. [1] The digestive system usually has the following parts: buccal mass (including the mouth, pharynx, and retractor muscles of the pharynx) and salivary glands with salivary ducts; oesophagus and ...
Rotifers have a small cerebral ganglion, effectively its brain, located just above the mastax, from which a number of nerves extend throughout the body. The number of nerves varies among species, although the nervous system usually has a simple layout. [17] The nervous system comprises about 25% of the roughly 1,000 cells in a rotifer. [18]
Loricifera (from Latin, lorica, corselet (armour) + ferre, to bear) is a phylum of very small to microscopic marine cycloneuralian sediment-dwelling animals with 43 described species. [3] and approximately 100 more that have been collected and not yet described. [4] Their sizes range from 100 μm to ca. 1 mm. [5]