Study Material and Notes of Ch 2 Nutrition in Animals Class 7th Science
• Introduction
• Mode of nutrition in Animals
• Nutrition in Humans
• Salivary Glands
• Liver
• Pancreas
• Digestion in large intestine
Introduction
→ Animals and humans have heterotrophic mode of nutrition because they obtain their food directly or indirectly from plants.
Nutrition
→ Nutrition is the process of taking energy from food materials.
→ It is a complex process and involves five important steps − ingestion, digestion, absorption, assimilation, and egestion.
• Ingestion: It is the process of taking food. It takes place through mouth.
• Digestion: It is the process of breaking down of complex food components into simpler molecules.
• Absorption: It is the process in which all the digested food is absorbed by the walls of intestine.
• Assimilation is the process in which the absorbed food is delivered to each and every cell of the body where they are used to produce energy and complex substances such as proteins, etc.
• Egestion: It is the process in which the undigested, stored waste is excreted out from the body as faeces via anus.
Heterotrophic Nutrition
→ The heterotrophs that derive their energy directly from plants are called herbivores and those who derive their energy indirectly i.e. by eating herbivores are called carnivores.
• Omnivores: They feed on both plants and animals e.g. bear, rat, man etc.
• Decomposers: They obtain nutrients by breaking down remains of dead plants and animals, includes some bacteria and fungi.
Nutrition in Humans
The humans have complex mode of taking nutrition from food which is described below.
Mouth
Mouth includes teeth, salivary glands, and tongue.
Teeth
→ Teeth break down the food.
• They are of four types of teeth: molars, premolars (4), canines (2), and incisors (4) in each jaw.
• Molars are 6, Premolars are 4, Canines are 2 and Incisors are 4 in numbers and present in each jaw.
Functions of teeth
→ Molars and premolars are for chewing and grinding food.
→ Canines are for piercing and tearing food.
→ Incisors are for cutting and biting food.
→ In total life span of humans, two sets of teeth grow – milk teeth and permanent teeth.
Salivary glands
→ Saliva is secreted by salivary glands located under the tongue.
→ Salivary gland contains a digestive enzyme salivary amylase, which breaks down starch into sugar.
→ Tongue helps in chewing and swallowing of food.
→ The food from mouth passes down the oesophagus to the stomach, through the movement of walls of oesophagus (peristalsis)
→ Stomach mixes the food received from oesophagus with digestive juices.
→ Inner lining of stomach secretes hydrochloric acid and digestive juices.
Stomach
• Mucus: It protects the lining of stomach against the action of the acid.
• Hydrochloric acid: creates an acidic medium and helps in digestion of proteins.
• Digestive juices: break down protein into simple substance.
Pepsin breaks proteins into polypeptides
→ Rennin changes soluble milk proteins into curd which is insoluble.
→ The food from stomach moves into the small intestine.
Digestion in small intestine
→ It is the longest part (about 7.5 m long) of the alimentary canal.
→ It is the site where complete digestion of carbohydrates, proteins, and fats takes place.
→ All the digested food is absorbed by the walls of intestine. This process is known as absorption.
• Villi: They are innner lining of small intestine which has tiny finger-like projections..
→ Villi increase the surface area for more efficient food absorption.
→ The absorbed food is delivered to each and every cell of the body where they are used to produce complex substances such as proteins, etc. This process is known as assimilation.
→ It receives intestinal juice from two glands: liver and pancreas that help in further digestion of food.
Liver
→ It is the largest gland of the body and secretes bile juice.
→ Bile juice is stored in gall bladder and plays an important role in the digestion of fats.
Pancreas
→ Pancreas contains enzymes that help in complete digestion of all food components.
→ Amylase breaks starch into maltose
→ Lipase breaks complex fats into simple fats.
Functions of enzymes secreted in small intestine:
→ Maltase changes maltose to glucose
→ Sucrase changes sucrose to glucose
→ Lactase changes lactose to glucose
→ Peptidase changes polypeptides to amino acids
Digestion in large intestine
→ The digested food from small intestine goes into blood stream and the undigested and unabsorbed material and water enters the large intestine.
→ The function of large intestine is absorption of water and some salts from undigested food.
→ From large intestine, the waste material is stored in rectum in the form of semi-solid faeces.
→ The undigested, stored waste is excreted out from the body as faeces via anus. This process is known as egestion.
Digestion in Grass-Eating Animals
- The digestive system in grass-eating animals is different from that of humans.
- These animals chew continuously, even when they are not eating.
- They swallow the grass very fast and store it in a chamber called Rumen.
- In the rumen, the bacteria partially digest the food, and now it is called as cud.
- Later, the cud reverts to the mouth, and the animal chews it again slowly.
- This phenomenon is referred to as rumination, and the animals are called ruminants.
- They also have a very long small intestine, which helps in the complete digestion of cellulose, the main component of grass.
Cud
- Partially digested food, returned from the rumen into the mouth, for further chewing is called cud.
Rumination
- Rumination is the process by which the cattle regurgitate previously consumed feed and masticate it a second time.
To know more about “Digestion in Grass Eating Animals”,
Feeding and Digestion in Amoeba
Amoeba
- Amoeba is a single-celled organism, microscopic in nature, found in pond water.
- Amoeba regularly changes its shape and position.
Process of Digestion in Amoeba
- Amoeba captures the food particles with the help of pseudopodia. The process is called phagocytosis.
- A food vacuole is thus created with the food material inside.
- Digestive juices are produced into the food vacuole when it is moving through the cytoplasm.
- They act on the food and disintegrate it into simpler substances, and the digested food is then absorbed.
- Finally, the food vacuole opens to the outside and undigested food is released into the surrounding water.
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