• Re: The joy of Herbivores

    From Lawrence D'Oliveiro@ldo@nz.invalid to comp.os.linux.misc on Tue Nov 12 23:13:49 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.os.linux.misc

    On 12 Nov 2024 04:52:07 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    A few decades ago, I was informed of at least one case where
    do-gooders had left hay for an overpopulation of deer. The deer
    continued to die. Analysis showed the deer starved to death with
    full stomachs, because their digestive systems lacked the enzymes
    to digest the types of hay that were being left for them.

    That doesn’t make any sense to me. There is essentially just one major indigestible material in grassy/leafy matter, and that is cellulose. Only certain kinds of bacteria know how to digest cellulose -- no vertebrate
    does. So all herbivores have populations of bacteria like these in their
    guts -- if you look at a herbivore, you will see it is basically an
    elaborate system of digestive plumbing on legs -- a comfortable
    environment for those bacteria, that handily collects the food for them.

    And cellulose is cellulose. Whatever plant source the herbivore gets it
    from, it’s going to get digested.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Robert Riches@spamtrap42@jacob21819.net to comp.os.linux.misc on Wed Nov 13 05:04:17 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.os.linux.misc

    On 2024-11-12, Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> wrote:
    On 12 Nov 2024 04:52:07 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    A few decades ago, I was informed of at least one case where
    do-gooders had left hay for an overpopulation of deer. The deer
    continued to die. Analysis showed the deer starved to death with
    full stomachs, because their digestive systems lacked the enzymes
    to digest the types of hay that were being left for them.

    That doesn’t make any sense to me. There is essentially just one major indigestible material in grassy/leafy matter, and that is cellulose. Only certain kinds of bacteria know how to digest cellulose -- no vertebrate does. So all herbivores have populations of bacteria like these in their guts -- if you look at a herbivore, you will see it is basically an elaborate system of digestive plumbing on legs -- a comfortable
    environment for those bacteria, that handily collects the food for them.

    And cellulose is cellulose. Whatever plant source the herbivore gets it from, it’s going to get digested.

    A bit of web searching found a few references, and they appear to
    be from reasonably credible sources:

    6th and 7th paragraphs of this article: https://cpw.state.co.us/news/01132022/cpw-warns-public-dangers-illegally-feeding-wildlife

    apparently basically the same textZ: https://coloradooutdoorsmag.com/2022/01/19/harmful-not-helpful/

    9th paragraph: https://animalrangeextension.montana.edu/wildlife/private_land_wildlife_mgmt/winter-deer-feeding.html

    not specific to deer but appears applicable: https://smallfarms.oregonstate.edu/smallfarms/how-starve-animals-full-stomach

    middle of 2nd page:
    https://www.maine.gov/ifw/docs/deer_winter_feeding.pdf

    Thanks for triggering some learning.
    --
    Robert Riches
    spamtrap42@jacob21819.net
    (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Lawrence D'Oliveiro@ldo@nz.invalid to comp.os.linux.misc on Wed Nov 13 22:37:10 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.os.linux.misc

    On 13 Nov 2024 05:04:17 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    On 2024-11-12, Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> wrote:
    On 12 Nov 2024 04:52:07 GMT, Robert Riches wrote:

    A few decades ago, I was informed of at least one case where do-gooders
    had left hay for an overpopulation of deer. The deer continued to die.
    Analysis showed the deer starved to death with full stomachs, because
    their digestive systems lacked the enzymes to digest the types of hay
    that were being left for them.

    And cellulose is cellulose. Whatever plant source the herbivore gets it
    from, it’s going to get digested.

    6th and 7th paragraphs of this article: https://cpw.state.co.us/news/01132022/cpw-warns-public-dangers-illegally-feeding-wildlife

    Even feeding hay can harm deer. In some cases, deer given grass
    hay have starved to death with full stomachs because the hay did
    not provide the balanced nutrition the deer needed.

    Note that mention of “balanced nutrition”, not “lacked the enzymes to digest the types of hay”.

    In other cases, deer given alfalfa hay died from bloating when the
    alfalfa created froth in the stomach.

    This is a well-known issue with alfalfa, I think it affects cattle and
    sheep as well (both of which are popularly farmed here in NZ).

    9th paragraph: https://animalrangeextension.montana.edu/wildlife/private_land_wildlife_mgmt/winter-deer-feeding.html

    Feeding deer hay or corn can kill them, because they cannot always
    digest it. Deer digestion involves protozoa and bacteria that help
    break down food. Different micro-organisms help digest different
    types of vegetation. If a deer has been feeding on aspen or
    willows, it has built up the micro-organisms that digest only this
    kind of vegetation. If this same deer suddenly fills its stomach
    with corn or hay, it may not have enough of the corn- and
    hay-digesting micro-organisms in its stomach to digest the food. A
    deer can starve to death with a full stomach.

    Interesting. Definitely more specific. By the way, deer are browsers,
    are they not, not grazers. They eat bark, which is full of lignin
    (which is what makes wood woody). This is an entirely different kettle
    of fish from cellulose, and needs its own entirely different set of
    specialist bacteria to digest.

    Not sure what it is about corn: we can eat it no trouble, but then we
    have to cook it first.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114