Abstract :
Comparative physiology applies methods established in domestic animal science to a wider variety of species. This can lead to
improved insight into evolutionary adaptations of domestic animals, by putting domestic species into a broader context. Examples
include the variety of responses to seasonally fluctuating environments, different adaptations to heat and drought, and in
particular adaptations to herbivory and various herbivore niches. Herbivores generally face the challenge that a high food intake
compromises digestive efficiency (by reducing ingesta retention time and time available for selective feeding and for food
comminution), and a variety of digestive strategies have evolved in response. Ruminants are very successful herbivores. They
benefit from potential advantages of a forestomach without being constrained in their food intake as much as other foregut
fermenters, because of their peculiar reticuloruminal sorting mechanism that retains food requiring further digestion but clears the
forestomach of already digested material; the same mechanism also optimises food comminution. Wild ruminants vary widely in
the degree to which their rumen contents ‘stratify’, with little stratification in ‘moose-type’ ruminants (which are mostly restricted
to a browse niche) and a high degree of stratification into gas, particle and fluid layers in ‘cattle-type’ ruminants (which are more
flexible as intermediate feeders and grazers). Yet all ruminants uniformly achieve efficient selective particle retention, suggesting
that functions other than particle retention played an important role in the evolution of stratification-enhancing adaptations. One
interesting emerging hypothesis is that the high fluid turnover observed in ‘cattle-type’ ruminants – which is a prerequisite for
stratification – is an adaptation that not only leads to a shift of the sorting mechanism from the reticulum to the whole reticulorumen,
but also optimises the harvest of microbial protein from the forestomach. Although potential benefits of this adaptation
have not been quantified, the evidence for convergent evolution toward stratification suggests that they must be substantial. In
modern production systems, the main way in which humans influence the efficiency of energy uptake is by manipulating diet
quality. Selective breeding for conversion efficiency has resulted in notable differences between wild and domestic animals. With
increased knowledge on the relevance of individual factors, that is fluid throughput through the reticulo-rumen, more specific
selection parameters for breeding could be defined to increase productivity of domestic ruminants by continuing certain
evolutionary trajectories.
Keywords :
Herbivory , hindgut fermenter , foregut fermenter , BROWSER , Grazer