alimentary canal
(noun)
the organs of a human or an animal through which food passes; the digestive tract
Examples of alimentary canal in the following topics:
-
Invertebrate Digestive Systems
- Invertebrate digestive systems include a gastrovascular cavity with one opening or an alimentary canal with a true mouth and anus.
- The alimentary canal is a more advanced digestive system than a gastrovascular cavity and carries out extracellular digestion.
- Most other invertebrates like segmented worms (earthworms), arthropods (grasshoppers), and arachnids (spiders) have alimentary canals .
- (b) An alimentary canal has two openings: a mouth for ingesting food and an anus for eliminating waste, as shown in this nematode.
- Invertebrates like grasshoppers have alimentary canals with specialized compartments for digestion.
-
Superphylum Lophotrochozoa
- Animals belonging to superphylum Lophotrochozoa are protostomes: the blastopore (or the point of involution of the ectoderm or outer germ layer) becomes the mouth opening to the alimentary canal.
-
Malpighian Tubules of Insects
- They are usually found in pairs in the posterior regions of arthropod alimentary canals; the number of tubules varies with the species of insect.
-
Digestive Systems
- The digestive system consists of a group of organs that form a closed tube-like structure called the gastrointestinal tract (GI tract) or the alimentary canal .
-
Phylum Annelida
- Annelids possess a closed circulatory system of dorsal and ventral blood vessels that run parallel to the alimentary canal as well as capillaries that service individual tissues.
-
Balance and Determining Equilibrium
- Head position is sensed by the utricle and saccule, whereas head movement is sensed by the semicircular canals.
- The semicircular canals are three ring-like extensions of the vestibule.
- The semicircular canals contain several ampullae, with some oriented horizontally and others oriented vertically.
- Rotational movement of the head is encoded by the hair cells in the base of the semicircular canals.
- The movement of two canals within a plane results in information about the direction in which the head is moving, and activation of all six canals can give a very precise indication of head movement in three dimensions.
-
The Vestibular System
- The fluid-filled semicircular canals are tubular loops set at oblique angles, arranged in three spatial planes.
- The base of each canal has a swelling that contains a cluster of hair cells.
- One canal lies horizontally, while the other two lie at about 45 degree angles to the horizontal axis.
- Upon cessation of acceleration or deceleration, the movement of the fluid within the canals slows or stops.
- Note that the canals are not sensitive to velocity itself, but to changes in velocity.
-
Phylum Echinodermata
- Echinoderms possess a unique ambulacral or water vascular system, consisting of a central ring canal and radial canals that extend along each arm .
- From there, it passes into the stone canal, which moves water into the ring canal.
- The ring canal connects the radial canals (there are five in a pentaradial animal), and the radial canals move water into the ampullae, which have tube feet through which the water moves.
- These podocytes are connected by an internal system of canals to the madreporite.
- Stone canal 5.
-
Contractile Vacuoles in Microorganisms
- In Paramecium, which, presumably, has the most-complex and highly-evolved CV, the vacuole is surrounded by several canals, which absorb water by osmosis from the cytoplasm.
- After the canals fill with water, it is pumped into the vacuole.
-
Transduction of Sound
- The inner ear can be divided into three parts: the semicircular canals, the vestibule, and the cochlea, all of which are located in the temporal bone.
- In the cross section of the cochlea (top right figure), note that in addition to the upper canal and lower canal, the cochlea also has a middle canal.