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Information About

Ruminant




  Color blue
  Name Ruminants
  Regnum Animal ia
  Phylum Chordata
  Classis Mammal ia
  Ordo Artiodactyla
  Subordo '''Ruminantia'''
  Subdivision Ranks Families


A ruminant is any Hooved animal that digests its food in two steps, first by eating the raw material and regurgitating a semi-digested form known as Cud , then eating (chewing) the cud, a process called ruminating. Ruminants include Cattle , Goat s, Sheep , Camel s, Alpaca s, Llama s, Giraffe s, Bison , Buffalo , European Bison , Yak s, Water Buffalo , Deer , Wildebeest and Antelope . The suborder ''' Ruminantia ''' includes all those except the camels and llamas, which are Tylopoda . Ruminants also share another anatomical feature in that they all have an Even Number Of Toes .


EXPLANATION

Ruminants have a fore-stomach with four chambers. These are the Rumen , ''' Reticulum ''', ''' Omasum ''', and ''' Abomasum '''. In the first two chambers, the rumen and the reticulum, the food is mixed with saliva and separates into layers of solid and liquid material. Solids clump together to form the cud (or Bolus ). The cud is then regurgitated, chewed slowly to completely mix it with saliva and to break down the particle size. Fibre, especially Cellulose and Hemi-cellulose , is primarily broken down into the three Volatile Fatty Acids , Acetic Acid , Propionic Acid and Butyric Acid in these chambers by microbes ( Bacteria , Protozoa , and Fungi ). Protein and non-structural carbohydrate ( Pectin , Sugars , Starches ) are also fermented.

Even though the rumen and reticulum have different names they represent the same functional space as digesta can move back and forth between them. Together these chambers are called the reticulorumen. The degraded digesta, which is now in the lower liquid part of the reticulorumen, then passes into the next chamber, the omasum, where water and many of the inorganic mineral elements are absorbed into the blood stream. After this the digesta is moved to the last chamber, the abomasum. The abomasum is the direct equivalent of the monogastric stomach (for example that of the human or pig), and digesta is digested here in much the same way. Digesta is finally moved into the small intestine, where the digestion and absorption of nutrients occurs. Microbes produced in the reticulo-rumen are also digested in the small intestine. Fermentation continues in the large intestine in the same way as in the reticulorumen.

Almost all the glucose produced by the breaking down of cellulose and hemicellulose is used by microbes in the rumen, and as such ruminants usually absorb little Glucose from the Small Intestine . Rather, ruminants' requirement for glucose (for brain function and lactation if appropriate) is made by the liver from propionate, one of the volatile fatty acids made in the rumen .


CULTURAL IMPACT

The Law Of Moses in the Bible allowed only the eating of animals that had split hooves and swallowed their food multiple times, a stipulation preserved to this day in the Kashrut . This distinction between clean and Unclean Animal s approximately falls according to whether the animal ruminates. The close relation to rumination is appearant in many English translations of the Bible, which use the word ''cud'' in an expanded sense to indicate food that is re-chewed through either rumination or the process used by Lagomorphs .12


OTHER USES

The verb ''to ruminate'' has been extended Metaphor ically to mean ''to thoughtfully ponder'' or ''to Meditate '' on some topic. Similarly, ideas may be ''chewed on'' or ''digested''. ''Chew the (one's) cud'' is to reflect or meditate.



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