The rumen as a water store in sheep

1964 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 961 ◽  
Author(s):  
JF Hecker ◽  
OE Budtz-Olsen ◽  
M Ostwald

The rumen fluid volume in sheep was measured by the method of phenol red dilution. Serial determinations made in 22 sheep deprived of food and water for up to 8 days showed that the greatest decrease in rumen fluid volume occurred during the first 2–3 days, the magnitude of the decrease depending on the initial volume. After the third day, the rate of loss of rumen fluid became slower as the rumen fluid volume became depleted. Sheep deprived of food only gave similar results to those deprived of both food and water. This absorption of rumen fluid during the first 2–3 days of food and water deprivation may account for the expansion of plasma volume which has been recorded on the third day. In a group of eight sheep deprived of food and water for 4 days, the mean rumen volume loss for the period amounted to about half the body weight loss. These results support the view that in the sheep, the water balance of the body proper is kept virtually unaltered by fluid drawn from the alimentary tract during the first days of water deprivation. The animal does not become dehydrated, in the physiological sense, until this reserve is depleted. For this reason, the rumen may be regarded as a water "store" in sheep.

Author(s):  
Nora Goldschmidt ◽  
Barbara Graziosi

The Introduction sheds light on the reception of classical poetry by focusing on the materiality of the poets’ bodies and their tombs. It outlines four sets of issues, or commonplaces, that govern the organization of the entire volume. The first concerns the opposition between literature and material culture, the life of the mind vs the apprehensions of the body—which fails to acknowledge that poetry emerges from and is attended to by the mortal body. The second concerns the religious significance of the tomb and its location in a mythical landscape which is shaped, in part, by poetry. The third investigates the literary graveyard as a place where poets’ bodies and poetic corpora are collected. Finally, the alleged ‘tomb of Virgil’ provides a specific site where the major claims made in this volume can be most easily be tested.


Parasitology ◽  
1941 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Haddow

1. Isolated unmated female body-lice were worn in pillboxes between the skin and the clothes. They were kept constantly on the body but, by a simple device, groups of ten were permitted feeding periods of different length. These groups were fed for 4, 8, 12, 16, 20 and 24 hr. per day respectively. Another group of ten were never allowed to feed after the last moult.2. Some of the figures for egg yield were high. Lice in the 24 hr. group were able to maintain a rate of ten eggs per day for 4−5 days at a time.3. No significant difference in longevity or rate of egg-laying was found to exist between the 12, 16, 20 and 24 hr. groups nor between the 4 and 8 hr. groups but a pronounced and significant difference exists between the 8 and 12 hr. groups. Below 12 hr. there is a sharp fall in longevity and rate of egg production. The unfed group all died, without laying, on the third day.4. The rate of laying as shown by the mode increases progressively with increase in time allowed daily for feeding.5. With regard to the mean eggs per louse the position is less clear. It is felt that the 24 hr. group may differ significantly from the 12, 16 and 20 hr. groups but this is uncertain.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weixin Dong ◽  
Yong Hu ◽  
Jian-bin Zhong ◽  
Zhen-shan Yuan ◽  
Bing-ke Zhu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background. To analyze the underlying causes of frequent occurrence and nonunion of type II odontoid fracture.Methods. CT scans along with 3D imaging software (Mimics software) were used to measure the bone density of the axis. The axis was divided into three parts, including the odontoid of the axis (the first part), the base of the odontoid (the second part) and the body of the axis (the third part). The CT value of the axis was measured and analyzed in different axial planes from top to bottom, followed by calculation and comparison of the mean CT value of the three parts of the axis.Results. The mean CT value of the odontoid (the first part), base of the odontoid (the second part) and body of the axis (the third part) was 651.35±188.32, 318.38±98.82 and 397.45±93.59, respectively. In addition, the interval variation of CT value of different axial planes was initially decreased and further increased with the change of axial planes from top to bottom.Conclusion. The mean CT value of the base of the odontoid was significantly lower than that of the odontoid or the body of the axis. Therefore, the base of the odontoid was the transition region of shape and bone density, which may be one possible cause for the frequent occurrence and nonunion in the type II odontoid fracture in axis fracture.


2013 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
MZR Majumder ◽  
Mohan Kumar Dash ◽  
Rafia Akhtar Khan ◽  
Humayun Reza Khan

The biology of Boettcherisca peregrina (Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830) (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) was studied in the laboratory (25 ± 5ºC, R.H. 70 ± 10% and 12 h light: 12 h dark cycle ). There were four definite life stages, such as egg, larva, pupa and adult, in its life cycle. The mean duration of the life cycle was 13.19 ± 1.32 days. The egg was creamy white color, cylindrical, rounded at both ends. The egg shell was comparatively thick and hard. There were three larval instars. The larvae of B. peregrina were acephalous and apodus type. The transparent 12 segmented larva possessed a pair of mouth hook, bands of small backwardly directed black micro spines, a pair of prothorasic spiracle and a pair of posterior spiracle. The 1st larvae were relatively more transparent at the time of hatching. The second instar larvae were voracious feeder. The body size increased largely during the third instar. They were deep creamy to pale brownish in color. The pupae of B. peregrina were coarctate adecticous type. The posterior end of the puparium was rounded and the anterior end was slightly pointed. The adults were metallic brown in color. The males were smaller in size than the females. The mean incubation period was 11.6 ± 2.70 hours, and the larval, post-feeding and pupal periods were 102.22 ± 7.85 hours, 75.4 ± 3.57 hours, and 5.81 ± 1.30 days, respectively. The longevity of the mated male and female adults (36.9 ± 2.46 days and 27.2 ± 2.25 days, respectively) were more than that of the unmated ones (23.6 ± 2.25 days and 18.3 ± 1.5 days, respectively). The protein fed adults lived longer than the protein unfed ones.The male always lived longer than the female. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjz.v40i2.14312 Bangladesh J. Zool. 40(2): 189-196, 2012


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1827
Author(s):  
Enver Çavuşoğlu ◽  
Metin Petek

Transport conditions of end-of-lay hens are important for their welfare. This study investigated the effects of season, plumage colour, and transportation distance on the welfare of end-of-lay hens. Retrospective data from 31,667,274 end-of-lay hens transported to a poultry slaughterhouse in Turkey were analysed. The mean body weight loss, dead-on-arrival (DOA) rate, and reject rate were 3.723%, 1.397%, and 0.616%, respectively. The effects of season, plumage colour, and transport distance on the evaluated parameters were all statistically significant (p < 0.001). The highest body weight loss was found in winter, while the lowest body weight loss was found in autumn. The average DOA rate was highest in spring and lowest in autumn. The highest average reject rate was found in spring (0.630%). Body weight loss, DOA rates, and reject rates were also significantly different among white and brown hens (p < 0.001; p < 0.001; p = 0.016, respectively). The highest body weight loss and reject rates were found in white plumage hens, while the highest DOA rate was found in brown plumage hens. The body weight loss and DOA rate were positively correlated with transportation distance (p < 0.001). The results of this study indicate that more preventive measures should be taken during the transport of end-of-lay hens, especially in cold seasons such as winter, and over longer transport distances, in regard to the welfare of these animals. Additionally, the transport of these animals should be lessened to a certain distance.


The first attempts to produce a capacity for induction in tissue which is normally incapable of performing such an action were made by Spemann and Geinitz in 1927. They grafted a fragment of presumptive ectoderm into the organization centre of another embryo, and, removing it a few hours later, found that it had been “infected” with the inducing capacity of the tissues by which it had been surrounded. The experiment inevitably suggested that the inducing capacity is the property of a chemical substance which had diffused out of the organizer tissue into the grafted ectoderm fragment. A similar hypothesis could be used to explain the observation of Mangold and Spemann (1927) that in normal development the presumptive neural plate acquires inducing capacity at the same time and in proportion as it is underlain and determined by the mesodermal organizer. The first suggestion that the non-inducing parts of a Urodele gastrula themselves possess an organizing capacity, which is masked but only awaits activation or release, emerged in the work of Dürken (1926), Bautzmann (1929, a , b ), Kusche (1929), and Holtfreter (1931), and attention was first drawn to it by Huxley (1930). The German authors showed that if fragments of the gastrula are “interplanted” into the body cavity or optic vesicle of older larvae, they may develop into something other than their presumptive fate, and in particular, presumptive epidermis or neural plate may develop into various mesodermal derivatives such as notochord or muscle. Huxley pointed out the similarity between this phenomenon, which was called bedeutungsfremde Selbstdifferenzierung , and the results of isolating parts of the axial gradient system of lower organisms, which have been particularly described by Child (summaries 1928, 1929). An isolated part of an axial gradient system reconstructs a “dominant region”; and Huxley suggested that we could account for bedeutungsfremde Selbstdifferenzierung by supposing that an isolated part of a gastrula reconstructs the dominant region, i.e ., the organization centre. In the spring of 1932 one of us (C. H. W.), while on a visit to the laboratory of Dr. O. Mangold in Berlin for the purpose of learning the technique of amphibian operations, attempted to carry the matter a step further. If Huxley’s explanation were correct, one would have to suppose that a capacity for behaving like a “dominant region”, that is, for inducing, is latent in the presumptive ectoderm, and this capacity should become manifest when the ectoderm changes into a dominant region after isolation. The following experiment was therefore made to test this point. Fragments of presumptive ectoderm from a young gastrula were interplanted into the eye-cavity of Anuran tadpoles, from which the eye-ball had previously been removed. After two days the interplanted tissue was removed and grafted by the Einsteck method into the blastocoele of young newt gastrulae, to discover whether they were capable of inducing the formation of neural plate. Three sets of controls were made. In one set organizing tissues were interplanted for two days and then tested to see whether their inducing capacity had been impaired, in the second set organizing tissue was isolated for two days in Holtfreter solution, and then tested, and in the third set presumptive ectoderm was isolated for two days in Holtfreter solution and tested for inducing capacity.


2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-201
Author(s):  
M.P. Petrovic ◽  
V.C. Petrovic ◽  
Z. Ilic ◽  
D. Ruzic-Muslic ◽  
M.M. Petrovic ◽  
...  

Research was carried out in population of R2 generation Pirot pramenka x Pirot improved sheep during period of three years. Lambs were divided into three groups: I from 2.5 kg to 3.5 kg; II from 3.6 kg to 4.5 kg; III from 4.6 kg to 5.5 kg. Weight of lambs was controlled at birth, with 30, 60 and 90 days of age. Average body weight at birth of the tested lambs was 3.35 kg in the first group, 4.30 kg in the second group and 5.06 kg in the third group. At 30 days of age, the body weight of the lambs was 10.19 kg in the first group, 11.39 kg in the second and 12.49 kg in the third group. All these differences in body weight of lambs at birth were statistically highly significant (P_ 0.01). With 60 days of age, average body weight was 16.48 kg in the first group, 19.01 kg in the second and 20.49 kg in the third group. Differences between groups of lambs at this age were statistically very significant (P_0.01).On the end of experiment at 90 days of lambs age, we have found the following values of the body weight of lambs: 26.35 kg in the first group, when the second 30.49 kg and 28.93 kg in the third group. Differences between groups of lambs at this age were statistically very significant (P_0.01). At the age of 90 days maximum weight of the body was in the second group of lambs, or a group which body weight at birth occupied the mean of the population. Correlations between body weights of lambs vary from weak to midsized values. The highest values of correlation coefficients were found between body weight at birth and weight of lambs at 30 days of age.


1981 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 345-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Alliston ◽  
C. E. Hinks

ABSTRACTForty-five crossbred cattle were scanned by ultrasonics at three sites on the body and were ‘condition scored’ before slaughter and subsequent dissection of a sample rib joint.Ultrasonic measurements gave a better indicator of fat content than did ‘condition score’. The third lumbar vertebra site on the body gave a better prediction of sample joint composition than did the 10th or 13th rib.The mean ultrasonic measurement of fat depth at the three sites did not improve the prediction of composition as compared with the value obtained at the third lumbar vertebra. The overall standard deviation for total fat concentration was 42·1 g/kg and for lean concentration was 35·4 g/kg. Area of fat at the third lumbar vertebra was the best single indicator of fat concentration and lean concentration in the sample joint, with residual standard deviations of 25·1 and 23·1 g/kg respectively. A combination of fat measurements at the 3rd lumbar position was the best overall predictor (residual standard deviation: 23·8g fat and 23·0g lean per kg).


1955 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 681-691 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOHN BUCK ◽  
MARGARET KEISTER

1. In Sciara larvae exposed to total anoxia before moulting, all visible movement and all visible change in the content of the tracheal system cease. Moulting and tracheal gas-filling can be postponed at least 1½ hr. beyond normal time. 2. In most third-stage larvae exposed to 0.3-0.75% O2 before the third moult, the future fourth-stage tracheal system, which is present fully-formed in the body, fills with gas .This shows that although moulting invariably precedes gas-filling under normal circumstances it need not do so. 3. In premoult larvae which have filled their trachea with gas upon exposure to 0.3-0.75% O2, the tracheae fill again with liquid when the larvae are put back into atmospheric air. This reversal of gas-filling can be alternated with gas-filling several times in the same individual. 4. The fact that in reversal of gas-filling an increase in pO2 promotes liquid-filling, whereas in moulted larvae it not only never leads to liquid-filling but actually accelerates gas-filling, indicates that some basic, but at least temporarily reversible physiological or chemical change occurs in the tracheae or in the metabolism of the peritracheal tissue, near the time of moulting. A partial explanation of the observed phenomena can be made in terms of a combination of active uptake and physical uptake of tracheal liquid. Evidence for the existence of both types of mechanism, separately, has been adduced by Wigglesworth in other material.


1988 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Brosh ◽  
I. Choshniak ◽  
A. Tadmor ◽  
A. Shkolnik

SummaryIn Bedouin goats maintained outdoors during the summer, fed lucerne hay and watered once daily, drinking was followed by a 35% increase in rumen fluid volume, with a concomitant drop in osmolality from 300 to 150 m-osmol/kg. When water was provided to these goats only once every 4 days, a three-fold increase in the rumen fluid volume was recorded and osmolality dropped from 360 to 80 m-osmol/kg.Feeding, which was depressed during the hot hours of the day, resumed in the afternoon and was followed by an expansion of rumen fluid volume. This expansion occurred irrespective of drinking and was sustained throughout the night. On the 1st day of water denial it amounted to 40% of the noontime rumen fluid volume and was less pronounced during the rest of the water deprivation period. An evening increase in the concentrations of volatile fatty acids, along with a compatible increase in the osmolality and a drop in the pH, also followed the afternoon resumption of feeding.In goats maintained on wheat straw, drinking as well as feeding time affected the physico-chemical conditions in the rumen to a lesser degree than in goats maintained on lucerne hay.


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