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  2. Hindgut fermentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindgut_fermentation

    While ruminants require a good deal of time resting between meals, hindgut fermenters are able to take in smaller meals more frequently, allowing them to eat and move more readily. [8] The large hindgut fermenters are bulk feeders: they ingest large quantities of low-nutrient food, which they process more rapidly than would be possible for a ...

  3. Ruminant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruminant

    Being hindgut fermenters, these animals ferment cellulose in an enlarged cecum. In smaller hindgut fermenters of the order Lagomorpha (rabbits, hares, and pikas), and Caviomorph rodents ( Guinea pigs , capybaras , etc.), material from the cecum is formed into cecotropes , passed through the large intestine, expelled and subsequently reingested ...

  4. Monogastric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monogastric

    However, their ability to extract energy from cellulose digestion is less efficient than in ruminants. [2] Herbivores digest cellulose by microbial fermentation. Monogastric herbivores which can digest cellulose nearly as well as ruminants are called hindgut fermenters, while ruminants are called foregut fermenters. [3]

  5. Peccary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peccary

    Peccaries are foregut fermenters (pigs are hindgut fermenters). [10] This foregut fermentation, similar to but separately evolved from a ruminant, is an example of convergent evolution . Peccaries are omnivores and will eat insects, grubs, and occasionally small animals, although their preferred foods consist of roots, grasses , seeds, fruit ...

  6. Cud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cud

    Accordingly, these animals rely on a symbiotic relationship with a wide range of microbes, which largely reside in the reticulorumen, and which are able to synthesize the requisite enzymes. The reticulorumen thus hosts a microbial fermentation which yields products (mainly volatile fatty acids and microbial protein), which the ruminant is able ...

  7. ‘World’s first’ lab-grown meat for pets launches in the UK

    www.aol.com/news/world-first-lab-grown-meat...

    Ensor says that Meatly currently uses 50-liter (13-gallon) bioreactors to grow its cells, but to be able to scale up production, it’s planning to move to a new facility that will employ 20,000 ...

  8. Perissodactyla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perissodactyla

    All perissodactyls are hindgut fermenters. In contrast to ruminants, hindgut fermenters store digested food that has left the stomach in an enlarged cecum, where the food begins digestion by microbes, with the fermentation continuing in the large colon. No gallbladder is present. The stomach of perissodactyls is simply built, while the cecum ...

  9. Kangaroo Muscle Mania: The Secret Behind Their Buff Bodies - AOL

    www.aol.com/kangaroo-muscle-mania-secret-behind...

    Kangaroos may have a reputation for being cute and cuddly animals, but the males of the species can be pretty intimidating. In fact, if you happen to run into one of these muscly males, you wouldn ...