Abstract
The cellulase of the higher termite Nasutitermes exitiosus was located in the foregut (19%), the midgut (59%), the mixed segment (14%) and in the hindgut (8%). Removal of the gut flora by feeding tetracycline or by starving the termite did not affect the activity of the enzymes indicating that the termite secretes its own cellulase and is not dependent on its gut flora for the digestion of cellulose. The cellulase of the lower termite Coptotermes lacteus was distributed through the foregut (19%), midgut (32%) and hindgut (49%). Removal of the gut flora and fauna, left the specific activity of the cellulase of the fore- and mid-gut largely unaffected, but led to a 20% decrease in the specific activity of the cellulase in the hindgut. In starved C. lacteus the distribution of cellulase activity was foregut, 44%; midgut, 30% and hindgut, 26%. These results indicate that C. lacteus synthesises its own cellulase in addition to using the gut protozoa for cellulose digestion.
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