Digesta retention in the gastro-intestinal tract of the orang utan (Pongo pygmaeus)

1999 
The diet of the orang utanPongo pygmaeus consists of fruit, leaves, communal insects, and bark, and contains appreciable amounts of non-starch polysaccharides. These complex carbohydrates require microbial fermentation before they can be used as an energy source by the orang utans. The gastrointestinal tract ofP. pygmaeus consists of a simple or unipartite stomach, a relatively long small intestine, and a complex haustrated caecum and colon. This morphology suggests that the capacious proximal colon is the principal site of digesta retention and fermentation of non-starch polysaccharides. We measured several parameters of digesta retention by giving three captive adultP. pygmaeus a pulse dose of inert markers specific for the solute and particulate phases of the digesta and collected their faeces at regular intervals over 192–338 hours. Transit times (times of first appearance of the markers in the faeces) and mean retention times (MRT) were long, consistent with a large complex gastro-intestinal tract. MRTs for the particulate marker were longer (p=0.032) than for the solute marker, indicative of selective retention of large particulate digesta. These results are consistent with the patterns of marker excretion in other mammals that use the digestive strategy of colon fermentation.
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