info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Digestive flexibility in females of the subterranean rodent ctenomys talarum in their natural habitat
Fecha
2011-03Registro en:
del Valle, Juana Cristina; Lopez Mañanes, Alejandra Antonia; Digestive flexibility in females of the subterranean rodent ctenomys talarum in their natural habitat; Wiley-liss, Div John Wiley & Sons Inc; Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological Genetics and Physiology; 315 A; 3; 3-2011; 141-148
1932-5223
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
del Valle, Juana Cristina
Lopez Mañanes, Alejandra Antonia
Resumen
We studied the occurrence of digestive strategies at different levels in females of the subterranean herbivorous rodent Ctenomys talarum living in their natural habitat. We determined the dimensions of different parts of the gastrointestinal tract and organs along as the activity of key digestive enzymes(sucrase, maltase and N-aminopeptidase) in small intestine in females seasonally caught. Females of C. talarum did not show seasonal variations in the mass of the different parts of the gastrointestinal tract. In nonreproductive females large intestine was longer in autumn, whereas reproductive females did not show seasonal variations in the length of the different parts of the gut. Females of C. talarum exhibited a high sucrose, maltase and N-aminopeptidase activity in small intestine, although these activities were higher in small intestine of females caught in autumn (nonreproductive) than in females caught in winter (reproductive). The results show that C. talarum females exhibit characteristics in the gut at the morphological and biochemical level, which could represent digestive strategies to face the constraints imposed by their costly particular way of life.