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#12 |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
... okay -- "brain food", and all that ...
BTW, just last night I saw a "Nature" episode about animals' efforts to get necessary minerals in their diets. One example was deer that were introduced to some desolate western Orkneys island, where the usual sources of calcium for deer are absent. (I.e., the vegetation was calcium-poor.) Anyway, some guy using an infrared camera videoed one of the deer, at night, approaching a seabird nest where a fledgling had died (the parents routinely set out on migration when the fledglings are able to fly, but haven't yet done so). The deer picked up the bird body and very carefully chewed it for an hour or so before dropping it. When the cameraman went to the bird body, he found that the deer had chewed out the bones from the carcass, but left the meat, feathers, skin and all else. Even chewed away the bird's leg bones but left the feet attached to the skin -- "moderation", after all. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2007-04-24 at 00:23 |
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#13 | |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
2×5,393 Posts |
Quote:
I knew there had to be some other species. Paul |
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#14 |
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"Nancy"
Aug 2002
Alexandria
2,467 Posts |
Regarding not being able to be picky about the occasional algae among the krill, or the mosquito sitting on a leaf: it appears that some fish that are considered strictly or mostly carnivorous do, in fact, rely on getting some half-digested vegetable food from the stomachs of their prey. They require some nutients from vegetable food but lack the enzymes to digest them, so they let someone else do the tricky part of the digestion, and then eat them!
I don't have hard evidence to back this up, i.e. I don't know which species in particular would suffer from malnutrition if they didn't get half-digested vegetable food. It's a story I heard on some boards on aquaristics, but it seemed not too unplausible to me. But it makes for a nice anecdote that the line between carnivorous and herbivorous diet is a bit fuzzy. Another case is that wolves are pretty much the archetype of a carnivorous animal, yet they are quite fond of eating grapes, for example. Alex |
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#15 |
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"Mike"
Aug 2002
5×17×97 Posts |
Not sure if it matters or not, but the gerbils like chicken and grapes.
And sunflower seeds. |
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#16 | |
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Bronze Medalist
Jan 2004
Mumbai,India
22·33·19 Posts |
I quote from my post number 9 Quote:
Mally
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