15 research outputs found
Testing predictions on body mass and gut contents: dissection of an African elephant Loxodonta africana Blumenbach 1797
The values reported in the literature for the total gastrointestinal tract (GIT) content mass of elephants are lower than expected from interspecific mammalian regression. This finding agrees with theoretical considerations that elephants should have less capacious GITs than other herbivorous mammals, resulting in short ingesta retention times. However, the data on elephants was so far derived from either diseased zoo specimens or free-ranging animals subjected to an unknown hunting stress. In this study, we weighed the wet contents of the GIT segments of a captive African elephant that was euthanased because of a positive serological tuberculosis test, but that was clinically healthy, did not show a reduced appetite, and ingested food up to the time of euthanasia. The animal weighed 3,140 kg and its total gut contents were 542 kg or 17% of body mass. This is in close accord with the published mammalian herbivore regression equation of Parra (Comparison of foregut and hindgut fermentation in herbivores. In: Montgomery GG (ed) The ecology of arboreal folivores. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington DC, pp205-230, 1978) and contradicts the notion that elephants have comparatively less capacious gastrointestinal tracts. Data on the individual gut segments, however, do support earlier suspicions that elephants have a comparatively less capacious caecum and a disproportionally capacious colon
Nutrition, mental health and violence: from pregnancy to postpartum Cohort of women attending primary care units in Southern Brazil - ECCAGE study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Woman's nutritional status, before and during pregnancy, is a strong determinant of health outcomes in the mother and newborn. Gestational weight gain and postpartum weight retention increases risk of overweight or obesity in the future and they depend on the pregestational nutritional status and on food consumption and eating behavior during pregnancy. Eating behavior during pregnancy may be the cause or consequence of mood changes during pregnancy, especially depression, which increases likelihood of postpartum depression. In Brazil, a study carried out in the immediate postpartum period found that one in three women experienced some type of violence during pregnancy. Violence and depression are strongly associated and both exposures during pregnancy are associated with increased maternal stress and subsequent harm to the infant. The main objectives of this study are: to identify food intake and eating behaviors patterns; to estimate the prevalence of common mental disorders and the experience of violence during and after pregnancy; and to estimate the association between these exposures and infant's health and development.</p> <p>Methods/Design</p> <p>This is a cohort study of 780 pregnant women receiving care in 18 primary care units in two cities in Southern Brazil. Pregnant women were first evaluated between the 16<sup>th </sup>and 36<sup>th </sup>week of pregnancy at a prenatal visit. Follow-up included immediate postpartum assessment and around the fifth month postpartum. Information was obtained on sociodemographic characteristics, living circumstances, food intake, eating behaviors, mental health and exposure to violence, and on infant's development and anthropometrics measurements.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>This project will bring relevant information for a better understanding of the relationship between exposures during pregnancy and how they might affect child development, which can be useful for a better planning of health actions aiming to enhance available resources in primary health care.</p
Comparative thanatology, an integrative approach: exploring sensory/cognitive aspects of death recognition in vertebrates and invertebrates
Evolutionary thanatology benefits from broad taxonomic comparisons of non-human
animals’ responses to death. Furthermore, exploring the sensory and cognitive bases
of these responses promises to allow classification of the underlying mechanisms on
a spectrum from phylogenetically ancient to more derived traits. We draw on studies
of perception and cognition in invertebrate and vertebrate taxa (with a focus on
arthropods, corvids, proboscids, cetaceans and primates) to explore the cues that
these animals use to detect life and death in others, and discuss proximate and
ultimate drivers behind their capacities to do so. Parallels in thanatological behaviour
exhibited by the last four taxa suggest similar sensory-cognitive processing rules for
dealing with corpses, the evolution of which may have been driven by complex social
environments. Uniting these responses is a phenomenon we term “animacy
detection malfunction”, whereupon the corpse, having both animate and inanimate
attributes, creates states of fear/curiosity manifested as approach/avoidance
behaviours in observers. We suggest that integrating diverse lines of evidence
(including the “uncanny valley” effect originating from the field of robotics) provides a
promising way to advance the field, and conclude by proposing avenues for future
research