Journal article
Authors list: Westermann, B; Ruth, P; Litzlbauer, HD; Beck, I; Beuerlein, K; Schmidtberg, H; Kaleta, EF; Schipp, R
Publication year: 2002
Pages: 1617-1624
Journal: Journal of Experimental Biology
Volume number: 205
Issue number: 11
ISSN: 0022-0949
Publisher: The Company of Biologists
Abstract:
Using X-ray analytical studies and computational tomography, the position of the digestive tract of the tetrabranchiate cephalopod Nautilus pompilius L. was demonstrated in a living animal. For the first time, a detailed analysis of the rate of digestion and the duration of the different phases of a digestive cycle has been made using these in vivo methods. At 20 min after food intake, the food has entered the stomach, where it is reduced to small pieces; most is stored in the crop, which is enlarged to approximately four times its original size. The chyme reaches the midgut gland 3 h and the rectal loop 5 h after food intake. The time between food intake and elimination is 12 h. Thus, in Nautilus pompilius, digestion takes approximately the same time as described for nectobenthic sepioids and benthic octopods but is approximately 6 h longer than in loliginids, which have a pelagic mode of life. Furthermore, the three-dimensional structure of the digestive tract of a living Nautilus pompilius L. was demonstrated using computational tomography.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Westermann, B., Ruth, P., Litzlbauer, H., Beck, I., Beuerlein, K., Schmidtberg, H., et al. (2002) The digestive tract of Nautilus pompilius (Cephalopoda, Tetrabranchiata):: an X-ray analytical and computational tomography study on the living animal, Journal of Experimental Biology, 205(11), pp. 1617-1624
APA Citation style: Westermann, B., Ruth, P., Litzlbauer, H., Beck, I., Beuerlein, K., Schmidtberg, H., Kaleta, E., & Schipp, R. (2002). The digestive tract of Nautilus pompilius (Cephalopoda, Tetrabranchiata):: an X-ray analytical and computational tomography study on the living animal. Journal of Experimental Biology. 205(11), 1617-1624.
Keywords
Cephalopoda; computational tomography; digestive organ; Nautilus pompilius; ORGANS; three-dimensional reproduction; VULGARIS; X-ray examination