(a) ingestion, digestion, absorption, assimilation and egestion
(b) liver
(c) digestive
(d) villi
(e) food vacuole
Digestion of starch starts in the mouth because saliva contains digestive juice. The tongue mixes food with saliva. The gall bladder stores bile temporarily. Ruminants bring back cud and chew it again.
(a) F
(b) T
(c) T
(d) T
Bile and pancreatic juice help digest fats in the small intestine. The large intestine absorbs water and salts from undigested food.
(a) (iii) small intestine
(b) (iv) large intestine
Carbohydrates - Sugar; Proteins - Amino acids; Fats - Fatty acids and glycerol.
Villi are finger-like projections on the inner wall of the small intestine. They increase the surface area for absorption of digested food. Each villus has blood vessels that carry absorbed nutrients to all parts of the body.
Bile is produced by the liver and stored temporarily in the gall bladder. It helps in the digestion of fats.
Cellulose can be digested by ruminants but not by humans. Ruminants have bacteria in a special part of the stomach that help digest cellulose, while humans do not have such cellulose-digesting bacteria in their digestive system.
Glucose is a simple sugar. It does not need much digestion and is absorbed quickly into the blood, so it can be used rapidly by body cells to release energy.
The small intestine absorbs digested nutrients and completes digestion. Teeth in the mouth chew food. Hydrochloric acid in the stomach kills many bacteria. The large intestine absorbs water and forms faeces.
(i) small intestine
(ii) mouth or buccal cavity
(iii) stomach
(iv) small intestine
(v) large intestine
Similarity: both Amoeba and humans ingest, digest, absorb, assimilate and egest food. Difference: Amoeba engulfs food with pseudopodia and digests it in a food vacuole, while humans take food through the mouth and digest it in a well-developed digestive canal.
Salivary gland - Saliva secretion; Stomach - Acid release; Liver - Bile juice secretion; Rectum - Storage of undigested food; Small intestine - Digestion is completed.
No. Raw leafy vegetables provide vitamins, minerals and fibre, but they do not by themselves supply all nutrients in required amounts. Humans also cannot digest cellulose efficiently like ruminants. A balanced diet containing carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals and water is needed for healthy survival.