Examples of ingestion in the following topics:
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- For animals, the first step is ingestion, the act of taking in food.
- The first step in this process is ingestion: taking in food through the mouth.
- Besides nutritional items, other substances may be ingested, including medications (where ingestion is termed oral administration) and substances considered inedible, such as insect shells.
- The first step in obtaining nutrition is ingestion.
- Describe the process of ingestion and its role in the digestive system
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- Ingested material enters the mouth and passes through a hollow, tubular cavity.
- Once the food is ingested through the mouth, it passes through the esophagus and is stored in an organ called the crop; then it passes into the gizzard where it is churned and digested.
- (a) A gastrovascular cavity has a single opening through which food is ingested and waste is excreted, as shown in this hydra and in this jellyfish medusa.
- (b) An alimentary canal has two openings: a mouth for ingesting food and an anus for eliminating waste, as shown in this nematode.
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- Many metabolites are toxic and can even be lethal to animals that ingest them.
- Some compounds become toxic after ingestion; for instance, glycol cyanide in the cassava root releases cyanide only upon ingestion by the herbivore.
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- It is responsible for processing ingested food and liquids.
- The functions of the digestive system can be summarized as follows: ingestion (eat food), digestion (breakdown of food), absorption (extraction of nutrients from the food), and defecation (removal of waste products).
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- The first phase of ingestion, called the cephalic phase, is controlled by the neural response to the stimulus provided by food.
- Gastric acids and enzymes process the ingested materials.
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- Amoebas and some other heterotrophic protist species ingest particles by a process called phagocytosis in which the cell membrane engulfs a food particle and brings it inward, pinching off an intracellular membranous sac, or vesicle, called a food vacuole .
- The vesicle containing the ingested particle, the phagosome, then fuses with a lysosome containing hydrolytic enzymes to produce a phagolysosome, which breaks down the food particle into small molecules that diffuse into the cytoplasm for use in cellular metabolism.
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- Vertebrates may have a single stomach, several stomach chambers, or accessory organs that help to break down ingested food.
- These chambers contain many microbes that break down cellulose and ferment ingested food.
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- Certain anaerobic parabasalid species exist in the digestive tracts of termites and wood-eating cockroaches where they contribute an essential step in the digestion of cellulose ingested by these insects as they bore through wood.
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- Organisms ingest large molecules, like carbohydrates, proteins, and fats, and convert them into smaller molecules like carbon dioxide and water.
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- Many metabolites are toxic and can even be lethal to animals that ingest them.