DIGESTIVE-TRACT FUNCTION AND ENERGY-REQUIREMENTS OF THE RUFOUS HARE-WALLABY, LAGORCHESTES-HIRSUTUS

Citation
A. Bridie et al., DIGESTIVE-TRACT FUNCTION AND ENERGY-REQUIREMENTS OF THE RUFOUS HARE-WALLABY, LAGORCHESTES-HIRSUTUS, Australian journal of zoology, 42(6), 1994, pp. 761-774
Citations number
45
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
ISSN journal
0004959X
Volume
42
Issue
6
Year of publication
1994
Pages
761 - 774
Database
ISI
SICI code
0004-959X(1994)42:6<761:DFAEOT>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Digestive performance and rate of passage of fluid and particulate mar kers through the gastrointestinal tract were measured in captive rufou s hare-wallabies (Lagorchestes hirsutus) maintained on a commercial pe lleted diet. This diminutive (0.8-2.1 kg) marcropodid marsupial was fo und to have a large, basically tubiform forestomach (tubiform forestom ach 71-74% of total stomach capacity), similar to that of the large gr azing kangaroos and markedly different from those of small browsing wa llabies and similar-sized rat-kangaroos. This 'kangaroo-like' gastric morphology, together with a low maintenance energy requirement (326 kJ digestible energy kg-0.75 day-1) and thus low food intakes (33 g dry matter kg-0.75 day-1) and long mean retention times of digesta in the gut (23 h for a fluid marker, 38 h for a particle marker), were consid ered to be major factors in the ability of this small arid-zone herbiv ore to digest fibre (50% of the neutral-detergent fibre and 31% of the acid-detergent fibre of the pelleted diet) and thus to utilise plant material that is often of low quality in the Tanami Desert.