4.2 Article

Low activities of digestive enzymes in the guts of herbivorous grouse (Aves: Tetraoninae)

期刊

JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY
卷 162, 期 2, 页码 477-485

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10336-020-01835-z

关键词

Aminopeptidase-N; Digestive physiology; Maltase; Sucrase

资金

  1. Fulbright Commission through a Fulbright-Hays Grant
  2. National Science Foundation [DEB-1146194, OIA-1826801]
  3. University of Pittsburgh

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This study found that grouse may utilize a yield-maximizing digestion strategy characterized by relatively long gut retention times and generally lower activities of digestive enzymes. This strategy could be related to the consumption of plants with compounds known to inhibit digestive enzymes.
Avian herbivores face the exceptional challenge of digesting recalcitrant plant material while under the selective pressure to reduce gut mass as an adaptation for flight. One mechanism by which avian herbivores may overcome this challenge is to maintain high activities of intestinal enzymes that facilitate the digestion and absorption of nutrients. However, previous studies in herbivorous animals provide equivocal evidence as to how activities of digestive enzymes may be adapted to herbivorous diets. For example, rate-maximizing herbivores generally exhibit rapid digesta transit times and high activities of digestive enzymes. Conversely, yield-maximizing herbivores utilize long gut retention times and express lower activities of digestive enzymes. Here, we investigated the activities of digestive enzymes (maltase, sucrase, aminopeptidase-N) in the guts of herbivorous grouse (Aves: Tetraoninae) and compared them to activities measured in several other avian species. We found that several grouse species exhibit activities of enzymes that are dramatically lower than those measured in other birds. We propose that grouse may use a yield-maximizing strategy of digestion, which is characterized by relatively long gut retention times and generally lower enzyme activities. These low activities of intestinal digestive enzyme could have ecological and evolutionary consequences, as grouse regularly consume plants with compounds known to inhibit digestive enzymes. However, more comprehensive studies on passage rates, digestibility, and microbial contributions will be necessary to understand the full process of digestion in herbivorous birds.

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