Abstract
The blood diet of the vampire bat represents an extraordinarily high ratio of protein to other nutrients and the highest water consumption per body weight of any other mammal. This bat has a unique gastrointestinal morphology that is characterized by a reduced small intestine, absence of a large intestine and intestinal cecum and the presence of a water-absorptive gastric fundus. The present study demonstrates that the gastric fundus has a greater Na +K +ATPase activity for active ion transport compared with other equally sized mammals. This activity is believed to be necessary to establish a gradient favoring water absorption across what would otherwise be an osmotic disequilibrium. The absence of a large intestine and intestinal cecum may reflect a reduced urea hydrolysis by the vampire bat. The present study demonstrated that the vampire bat does not hydrolyze urea as does an equally sized non-sanguinivorous mammal. These data suggest that the blood diet and the relocation of water-absorptive tissue from the lower intestinal tract to the stomach is associated with an active ion transport mechanism in the gastric tissue and a reduced capacity for ureolytic microbes to hydrolyze urea in the intestine. Both processes are specializations for a diet high in protein and water.
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More From: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology -- Part A: Physiology
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