Dictionary Definition
paunch n : a protruding abdomen [syn: belly]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From the French pance from pancier meaning breastplate as worn by the Black Rider(s) or Polish Pan Czerny of late medieval Poland.Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes with: -ɔːntʃ
Noun
- The stomach or abdomen of a human or animal, especially a large, protruding one.
Related terms
Extensive Definition
The rumen, also known as the fermentation vat or
paunch, forms the larger part of the reticulorumen, which is
the first chamber in the alimentary
canal of ruminant
animals. It serves as the primary site for microbial fermentation
of ingested feed. The smaller part of the reticulorumen is the
reticulum,
which is fully continuous with the rumen, but differs from it with
regard to the texture of its lining.
Brief anatomy
The reticulorumen is composed of several muscular
sacs, the cranial sac, ventral sac, ventral blindsac, and
reticulum.
The lining of the rumen wall is covered in small
finger like projections called papillae,
which are flattened, approximately 5 mm in length and 3 mm wide in
cattle. The reticulum (derived from the Latin for nethttp://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/reticulum)
is lined with ridges that form a hexagonal honeycomb pattern. The ridges
are approximately 0.1 - 0.2 mm wide and are raised 5 mm above the
reticulum wall. The hexagons in the reticulum are approximately 2-5
cm wide in cattle. These features increase the surface area of the
reticulorumen wall, facilitating the absorption of volatile fatty
acids. Despite the differences in the texture of the lining of the
two parts of the reticulorumen, it represents one functional
space.
Stratification and mixing of digesta
Digesta in rumen is not uniform, but rather is
stratified into gas, liquid, and particles of different sizes,
densities, and other physical characteristics. Additionally,
digesta does not merely enter and exit the rumen without event, but
it is subject to extensive mixing and travels along complicated
flow paths. Though they may seem trivial at first, these
complicated stratification, mixing, and flow patterns of digesta
are a key aspect of digestive activity in the ruminant and thus
warrant detailed discussion.
After being swallowed, ingesta travels down the
oesophagus and is
deposited in the dorsal
part of the reticulum. Contractions of the reticulorumen propel and
mix the recently ingested feed into the ruminal mat. The mat is a
thick mass of digesta, consisting of partially degraded, long,
fibrous material. Most material in the mat has been recently
ingested, and as such, has considerable fermentable substrate
remaining. Microbial fermentation proceeds rapidly in the mat,
releasing many gases. Some of these gases are trapped in the mat,
causing the mat to be buoyant. As fermentation proceeds,
fermentable substrate is exhausted, gas production decreases, and
particles lose buoyancy due to loss of entrapped gas. Digesta in
the mat hence goes through a phase of increasing buoyancy followed
by decreasing buoyancy. Simultaneously, the size of digesta
particles–relatively large when ingested–is reduced by microbial
fermentation and, later, rumination. At a certain point, particles
are dense and small enough that they may “fall” through the rumen
mat into the ventral sac below, or they may be swept out of the
rumen mat into the reticulum by liquid gushing through the mat
during ruminal contractions.
Once in the ventral sac, digesta continues to
ferment at decreased rates, further losing buoyancy and decreasing
in particle size. It is soon swept into the ventral reticulum by
ruminal contractions.
In the ventral reticulum, less dense, larger
digesta particles may be propelled up into the oesophagus and mouth
during contractions of the reticulum. Digesta is chewed in the
mouth in a process known as rumination, then expelled
back down the oesophagus and deposited in the dorsal sac of the
reticulum, to be lodged and mixed into the ruminal mat again.
Denser, small particles stay in the ventral reticulum during
reticular contraction, and then during the next contraction may be
swept out of the reticulorumen with liquid through the reticulo-omasal
orifice, which leads to the next chamber in the ruminant
animal's alimentary canal, the omasum.
Water and saliva enter through the rumen to form
a liquid pool. Liquid will ultimately escape from the reticulorumen
from absorption through the wall, or through passing through the
reticulo-omosal orifice, as digesta does. However, since liquid
cannot be trapped in the mat as digesta can, liquid passes through
the rumen much more quickly than digesta does. Liquid often acts as
a carrier for very small digesta particles, such that the dynamics
of small particles is similar to that of liquid.
The uppermost area of the rumen, the headspace,
is filled with gases (such
as methane, carbon
dioxide, and, to a much lower degree, molecular hydrogen) released from
fermentation and anaerobic
respiration of feed. These gases are regularly expelled from
the reticulorumen through the mouth, in a process called eructation.
Digestion
Digestion in the reticulorumen is a complex
process. Digestion occurs through fermentation by microbes in the
reticulorumen rather than the animal per se. The reticulorumen is
one of the few organs present in animals in which digestion of
cellulose and other
recalcitrant carbohydrates can proceed to any appreciable
degree.
The main substrates of digestion in the
reticulorumen are non-structural carbohydrates (starch, sugar, and pectin), structural carbohydrates
(hemicellulose and
cellulose), and
nitrogen-containing compounds (protein, peptides, and ammonia). Both non-structural
and structural carbohydrates are hydrolyzed to monosaccharides or
disaccharides by
microbial enzymes. The resulting mono- and disaccharides are
transported into the microbes. Once within microbial cell walls,
the mono- and disaccharides may be assimilated into microbial
biomass or fermented to volatile fatty acids (VFAs) acetate, propionate, butyrate, lactate,
galactate and other
branched-chain VFAs via glycolysis and other
biochemical pathways to yield energy for the microbial cell. Most
VFAs are absorbed across the reticulorumen wall, directly into the
blood stream, and are used by the ruminant as substrates for energy
production and biosynthesis. Some branched chained VFAs are
incorporated into the lipid membrane of rumen microbes. Protein is
hydrolyzed to peptides
and amino
acids by microbial enzymes, which are subsequently transported
across the microbial cell wall for assimilation into cell biomass,
primarily. Peptides, amino acids, ammonia, and other sources of
nitrogen originally present in the feed can also be utilized
directly by microbes with little to no hydrolysis. Non-amino acid
nitrogen is used for synthesis of microbial amino acids. In
situations in which nitrogen for microbial growth is in excess,
protein and its derivatives can also be fermented to produce
energy.
Lipids, lignin, minerals, and vitamins play a less prominent
role in digestion than carbohydrates and protein, but they are
still critical in many ways. Lipids are
hydrogenated, and glycerol, if present in the
lipid, is fermented. Lipids are otherwise inert in the rumen. Some
carbon from carbohydrate may be used for de novo synthesis of
microbial lipid. High levels of lipid, particularly unsaturated
lipid, in the rumen are thought to poison microbes and suppress
fermentation activity. Lignin, a phenolic
compound, is recalcitrant to digestion, through it can be
solubolized by fungi. Lignin is thought to shield associated
nutrients from digestion and hence limits degradation. Minerals are
absorbed by microbes and are necessary to their growth. Microbes in
turn synthesize many vitamins, such as cyanocobalamin, in great
quantities--often great enough to sustain the ruminant even when
vitamins are highly deficient in the diet.
Microbes in the reticulorumen
Microbes in the reticulorumen include bacteria, protozoa, fungi, archaea, and viruses. Bacteria, along with
protozoa, are the predominant microbes and by mass account for
40-60% of total microbial matter in the rumen. They are categorized
into several functional groups, such as fibrolytic, amylolytic, and proteolytic types, which
preferentially digest structural carbohydrates, non-structural
carbohydrates, and protein, respectively. Protozoa (40-60% of
microbial mass) derive most of their nutrients through phagocytosis of other
microbes, though they also degrade and digest food carbohydrates,
especially structural carbohydrates, and protein. Ruminal fungi
make up only 5-10% of microbes. Despite their low numbers, the
fungi still occupy an important niche in the rumen because they
solubolize lignin and
help break down digesta particles. Rumen Archaea, approximately 3%
of total microbes, are mostly autotrophic methanogens and
produce methane through anaerobic respiration. Viruses are present
in unknown numbers and do not contribute to any fermentation or
respiration activity. However, they do lyse microbes, releasing their
contents for other microbes to assimilate and ferment in a process
called microbial recycling.
Microbes in the reticulorumen eventually flow out
into the omasum and the remainder of the alimentary canal. Under
normal fermentation conditions the environment in the reticulorumen
is weakly alkaline and
is populated by microbes that are adapted to the elevated ph; since
the stomach is acidic it acts as a barrier that kills reticulorumen
flora as they flow into it. There they are digested and absorbed by
the ruminant. The digestion of these microbes in the stomach is a
major source of nutrition, as microbes can supply more than 50% of
the animal's protein needs, and they often provide the predominant
if not sole source of starch past the reticulorumen. Under
conditions of ruminal acidosis when the environment
of the reticulorumen has become acidic (usually due to excessive
fermentation of starches into alcohols and thence into acids),
microbes that favor a lower ph may start to dominate the ecosystem
of the reticulorumen and the animal's stomach ceases to function as
efficiently as a barrier between pre- and post-stomach populations
of microbes. Such conditions can disrupt the health of the
animal.
paunch in German: Pansen
paunch in Esperanto: Rumeno
paunch in French: Panse
paunch in Italian: Rumine
paunch in Macedonian: Бураг
paunch in Dutch: Pens
paunch in Japanese: ミノ
paunch in Narom: Paunche
paunch in Polish: Żwacz (przeżuwacze)
paunch in Portuguese: Rúmen
paunch in Finnish: Pötsi
paunch in Swedish: Våm
paunch in Walloon: Panse
paunch in Vlaams: Pense
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abdomen, abomasum, bay window, beerbelly, belly, bowel, breadbasket, corporation, craw, crop, diaphragm, disembowel, draw, embonpoint, first stomach,
gizzard, gullet, gut, honeycomb stomach, kishkes, manyplies, maw, midriff, omasum, pot, potbelly, potgut, psalterium, pusgut, rennet bag, reticulum, rumen, second stomach, spare tire,
stomach, swagbelly, third stomach,
tum-tum, tummy, underbelly, ventripotence