นก

ระบบการย่อยอาหารของนก

นกซึ่งเป็นสัตว์มีกระดูกสันหลังจัดอยู่ในไฟลัมคอร์ดาตา(Chordata)  ทางเดินอาหารประกอบด้วยปากซึ่งไม่มีฟัน  ต่อมน้ำลายเจริญไม่ดี  แต่สร้างเมือกสำหรับคลุกเคล้าอาหารและหล่อลื่นได้  มีคอหอยสั้น  หลอดอาหารยาว  มีถุงพักอาหาร(Crop) ซึ่งทำหน้าที่เก็บอาหารสำรองไว้ย่อยภายหลัง  กระเพาะอาหารแบ่งออกเป็น 2 ส่วน  คือ  กระเพาะตอนหน้าหรือกระเพาะย่อย (Proventriculus)  ทำหน้าที่สร้างน้ำย่อย  และกระเพาะอาหารตอนท้ายหรือกระเพาะบด (Gizzard)  ต่อจากกระเพาะบดเป็นลำไส้เล็ก  ลำไส้ใหญ่  ส่วนท้ายเป็นโคลเอกา (Cloaca)  ที่มีท่อไตและท่อของระบบสืบพันธุ์มาเปิดเข้าด้วยกัน  และทวารหนักซึ่งเป็นส่วนท้ายสุด

1. ปาก (Mouth) ปากของสัตว์ปีกแต่ละชนิดมีลักษณะแตกต่างกัน ขึ้นอยู่กับชนิดของอาหารที่กิน ในปากไม่มีฟัน
2. คอหอย (Pharynx)
3. หลอดอาหาร (Esophagus)
4. ถุงพักอาหาร (Crop) ทำหน้าที่เก็บอาหารสำรองไว้ย่อยภายหลัง
5. กระเพาะอาหาร (Stomach)
6. กึ๋น (Gizzard) ทำหน้าที่บดอาหารให้ละเอียด หรือมีขนาดเล็กลง เป็นการย่อยเชิงกล

7. ลำไส้ (Intestine) ทำหน้าที่ย่อยทางเคมี และดูดซึมสารอาหาร
8. ลำไส้ใหญ่ (Colon) ทำหน้าที่กำจัดกากอาหารออกนอกร่างกาย

9. ทวาหนัก (Anus) เป็นช่องเปิดปลายสุดของลำไส้ใหญ่ ทำหน้าที่ขับถ่ายกากอาหาร และของเสียจำพวกกรดยูริก

ทางเดินอาหารของสัตว์ปีกเรียงตามลำดับต่อไปนี้

รูปภาพ27

รูปภาพ28

ภาพที่ 2.14  แสดงทางเดินอาหารของนก   ที่มา :  www.kidwings.com

  1. 1.                  bill
  2. 2.                  mouth
  3. 3.                  tongue
  4. 4.                  pharynx
  5. 5.                  esophagus
  6. 6.                  crop
  7. 7.                  stomach
    1. a.                  proventriculus
    2. b.                 gizzard
  8. 8.                  small intestine
  9. 9.                  caeca
10.  rectum

11.  cloaca

A typical bird’s   digestive tract is usually considered to consist of the parts listed at the   right. You know what the bill, mouth and tongue are. The pharynx (FAIR-ingx) is the part between the   mouth and the esophagus, much involved with swallowing. The esophagus is the tube leading down from the   pharynx.

THE CROP:

Not present in all   birds, the crop serves more or less as a “doggy bag” when the bird   eats. Notice the crop in the picture above. Let’s say you’re a Song Sparrow   and you discover a weed just loaded with delicious-looking seeds, but the   weed grows in the open. If you flit into the open area to eat the weed’s   seeds, you’re making yourself vulnerable to predators who want to eat you. What   to do?

What you do is to   flit into the open and gobble up those seeds far faster than any stomach   could possibly handle them, then fly to safety. You can do this because of   your crop. For, as you cram in those seeds, a few at first go straight to the   gut but, when that fills, further seeds begin detouring to the bag-like crop.   Once the crop is full of seed, you fly to your favorite perch, and now   there’s not much to do but let your stomach digest. As those first seeds in   the stomach begin working their way through the rest of the body, seeds   stored in the crop automatically refill the stomach. If someday you pick up a   bird, perhaps one that has flown into a window and you want to save it from   the cat, if that bird has recently eaten, you well may be able to feel the   crop in the chest area, feeling like a bag filled with grit right below the   feathers.

Actually,   specialists in the field of bird guts would want to insist that some birds   have real crops, other birds have “pseudocrops,” and that there are   other croplike variations, but we don’t want to get too confused so we’ll   just leave it at that. 

OWL PELLETS
products of a special gizzard

Several hours after an owl     eats, the fur, bones, teeth & feathers of its prey still in the gizzard     are compressed into a pellet the same shape as the gizzard. In the above     photo you can see white bones enmeshed in a mass of fur and feathers. Once     formed, the pellet moves up from the gizzard to the proventriculus, where     it remains for up to 10 hours before being regurgitated. Owls can’t eat     while a fully formed pellet is present, blocking the digestive track. When     an Owl is ready to produce a pellet it usually closes its eyes, gets a funny     luck in its face, doesn’t want to fly and, when the pellet is ready to come     out, the beak is opened and the pellet simply drops out. Other birds of     prey, such as hawks, also produce pellets but the owl’s  digestive     juices are less acidic than those of other birds of prey, so there is more     material present to form a pellet.

THE TWO-CHAMBERED STOMACH:

The   proventriculus:
The stomach is an amazing affair consisting of two chambers. The   proventriculus is the first chamber. It secretes an acid for breaking down   food, and is best developed in birds that swallow entire fish and other   animals containing bones which must be digested. If you know a little   chemistry, you’ll know how amazing it is that bird stomach-acid can have a pH   as low as 0.2. In most of North America   there’s a kind of bird known as a shrike, which eats small animals,   especially rodents and songbirds. A shrike’s well developed first   stomach-chamber can digest an entire mouse in only three hours!

  • The        gizzard:
    The bird stomach’s second chamber is known as the gizzard. If you’ve        ever eaten a chicken gizzard you know how tough and rubbery it is. To        accomplish what the gizzard does, it absolutely must be tough,        for the gizzard’s main function is to grind and digest tough food.        Though the gizzard consists of very powerful muscles, it alone can’t        pulverize everything the typical bird eats; you know how hard uncooked        rice and corn kernels are, and these aren’t even considered hard types        of grain.
  • Something        other than muscle power is needed. This “something else” is        acquired when grain- eating birds pick up grit and small rocks as they        peck seeds from the ground.This mineral matter accumulates in the gizzard, and ultimately the        gizzard grinds the particles against the seeds, smashing them. Turkey        gizzards can actually pulverize English walnuts and steel needles! Bird        species that eat softer food possess less well developed gizzards. In        some species, the gizzard remains small and insignificant during the        summer when the diet consists of soft food such as flesh, insects, or        fruit, but it grows more powerful during the winter when seeds are the        main food.  Since birds eat such a wide variety of foods, you can        imagine that variations on the stomach theme are many. One of the most        elegant is found among grebes, which are very common water-birds you’re        bound to see if you visit local lakes or the seashore. Grebes swallow        their own feathers, which accumulate in the region between the        gizzard and the intestine following it. This feather-clogged zone then        serves as a filter for sharp fish bones that somehow make it past the        stomach.

BEYOND THE STOMACH:

Once food leaves   the gizzard, its voyage through the intestines   is fairly similar to that taken by food in our own intestines; nutrients are   absorbed into the body, and waste is eventually excreted. Intestines are   short in birds which eat easily absorbed food, such as fruit, flesh, and   insects, but long in species eating seeds, plants, and fish. Swifts, which   are insect-eating birds you’ll see skating across the suburban summer sky,   possess intestines only about three times their body length. In contrast,   intestines of vegetarian ostriches are roughly twenty times their body   length. Easily absorbed berries pass through a thrush’s intestine in less than   half an hour, while rougher food may need half a day or more.

The word “caeca” (SEE-kah)is the plural form   of caecum (SEE-kum), and the   plural form is used here because birds usually have two. Caeca are very   variable among the species, often looking like two little worms stuck at the   end of the intestines. Their usual function  appears to be to aid in the   absorption of water and proteins, and the microbial decomposition of fiber.

The rectum is the last part of the large intestine   in humans, and no digestion or absorption of food takes place there. The cloaca (klo-A-ka) is the end of the line   where waste from the digestive and urinary tract, and a little other stuff,   accumulate before being dumped.

 

ที่มา :

http://www.pw.ac.th/main/website/sci/2_data.htm.

http://www.backyardnature.net/birdguts.htm

ผู้จัดทำ

          1.  นายศุภณัฐ ชยุตพงศ์พันธุ์  เลขที่ 3

          2.  นายจักรพันธ์ มีขวัญ          เลขที่ 8

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