Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens

The gizzard is the only gastrointestinal organ for mechanical processing in birds. Many birds use grit in the gizzard to enhance mechanical processing efficiency. We conducted an experiment to test the factors that affect chicken grit use in 68 male layer chicks of Gallus gallus domesticus, which we...

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Main Authors: Ryuji Takasaki, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-11-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/10277.pdf
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author Ryuji Takasaki
Yoshitsugu Kobayashi
author_facet Ryuji Takasaki
Yoshitsugu Kobayashi
author_sort Ryuji Takasaki
collection DOAJ
description The gizzard is the only gastrointestinal organ for mechanical processing in birds. Many birds use grit in the gizzard to enhance mechanical processing efficiency. We conducted an experiment to test the factors that affect chicken grit use in 68 male layer chicks of Gallus gallus domesticus, which were divided into two different groups in gizzard muscularity (high and low). Within each muscularity group, two different diets were provided (herbivory and non-herbivory) to test whether diet and gizzard muscularity affect grit characteristics including amount, size, and shape (circularity, roundness, and solidity) at different stages of digestion (ingested grit, grit in gizzard, and excreted grit). All animals ingested more grit than they excreted, possibly because excreted grit was below the detection size limit of 0.5 mm of the present study. The amounts of grit ingested and remained in the gizzard were larger in herbivorous groups, but these groups excreted less grit. Larger, rougher grit was selectively ingested by all chicks, but size preferences were especially pronounced in the herbivorous groups. Grit in the gizzard tended to be larger in herbivorous groups, but the grit in excreta was smaller, whereas the size of excreted grit was larger in groups with less muscular gizzards. Grit in the gizzard was much smoother than the offered and ingested grit, especially in the herbivorous, muscular gizzard groups. Excreted grit in all groups was smoother than the offered grit. These results show that diet affects the characteristics of ingested grit, grit in the gizzard, and excreted grit, whereas gizzard muscularity affects the characteristics of grit in the gizzard and excreted grit. The use of larger sizes and amounts of grit by herbivorous groups may be a response to the needs of digesting hard, coarse materials. The recovered behavioral flexibility of grit use might reflect the omnivorous nature of Gallus gallus domesticus and may aid smooth dietary shifts. The results also show that the shape of grit remaining in the gizzard does not reflect the initial shape of ingested grit, in contrast to previously published ideas. Instead, the shape of grit in the gizzard more closely reflects the diet and gizzard muscularity of chicks.
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spelling doaj.art-a94117ae47f54191846c5d9054f19c0b2023-12-03T11:00:35ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-11-018e1027710.7717/peerj.10277Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickensRyuji Takasaki0Yoshitsugu Kobayashi1Department of Natural History Sciences, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, JapanHokkaido University Museum, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, JapanThe gizzard is the only gastrointestinal organ for mechanical processing in birds. Many birds use grit in the gizzard to enhance mechanical processing efficiency. We conducted an experiment to test the factors that affect chicken grit use in 68 male layer chicks of Gallus gallus domesticus, which were divided into two different groups in gizzard muscularity (high and low). Within each muscularity group, two different diets were provided (herbivory and non-herbivory) to test whether diet and gizzard muscularity affect grit characteristics including amount, size, and shape (circularity, roundness, and solidity) at different stages of digestion (ingested grit, grit in gizzard, and excreted grit). All animals ingested more grit than they excreted, possibly because excreted grit was below the detection size limit of 0.5 mm of the present study. The amounts of grit ingested and remained in the gizzard were larger in herbivorous groups, but these groups excreted less grit. Larger, rougher grit was selectively ingested by all chicks, but size preferences were especially pronounced in the herbivorous groups. Grit in the gizzard tended to be larger in herbivorous groups, but the grit in excreta was smaller, whereas the size of excreted grit was larger in groups with less muscular gizzards. Grit in the gizzard was much smoother than the offered and ingested grit, especially in the herbivorous, muscular gizzard groups. Excreted grit in all groups was smoother than the offered grit. These results show that diet affects the characteristics of ingested grit, grit in the gizzard, and excreted grit, whereas gizzard muscularity affects the characteristics of grit in the gizzard and excreted grit. The use of larger sizes and amounts of grit by herbivorous groups may be a response to the needs of digesting hard, coarse materials. The recovered behavioral flexibility of grit use might reflect the omnivorous nature of Gallus gallus domesticus and may aid smooth dietary shifts. The results also show that the shape of grit remaining in the gizzard does not reflect the initial shape of ingested grit, in contrast to previously published ideas. Instead, the shape of grit in the gizzard more closely reflects the diet and gizzard muscularity of chicks.https://peerj.com/articles/10277.pdfGizzardStomachGritDigestionChickenGastrolith
spellingShingle Ryuji Takasaki
Yoshitsugu Kobayashi
Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens
PeerJ
Gizzard
Stomach
Grit
Digestion
Chicken
Gastrolith
title Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens
title_full Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens
title_fullStr Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens
title_full_unstemmed Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens
title_short Effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens
title_sort effects of diet and gizzard muscularity on grit use in domestic chickens
topic Gizzard
Stomach
Grit
Digestion
Chicken
Gastrolith
url https://peerj.com/articles/10277.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT ryujitakasaki effectsofdietandgizzardmuscularityongrituseindomesticchickens
AT yoshitsugukobayashi effectsofdietandgizzardmuscularityongrituseindomesticchickens