Abstract
Feeding and digestive parameters were analysed in cockles Cerastoderma edule fed for 3 days on two foods of different qualities, both foods given in two different concentrations. With low quality food, gut content was found to increase with ingestion rate. Such increased capacity of the gut to allocate food precludes negative effects upon throughput time, and so absorption efficiency remained nearly constant at the two food concentrations. With high quality food, gut content remained at high constant values and consequently enhancement of food ingestion rate with a high food ration leads to a significant reduction in throughput time, resulting in lower absorption efficiencies. Significantly higher levels of amylases and cellulases have been found within the digestive gland of cockles fed high quality diets. Coincidentally, absorption of carbohydrates is increased and absorption of lipids decreased in such diets as compared to low quality diets. Implications of the positive correlation between digestive enzyme activity and food quality are discussed in relation to the role that both digestive investments and endogenous faecal losses play in digestive processes. Results obtained in this study indicate that investments in the form of digestive enzymes are a key factor in the functional response of cockles to short-term variations in the food regime.
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More From: Journal of Comparative Physiology B: Biochemical, Systemic, and Environmental Physiology
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