|
NEW YORK STATE 4-H MEAT GOAT PROJECT
FACT SHEET #14
|
by Suzanne Raupp
Revised April 1999
by Dr. Tatiana Stanton
Cornell University, Ithaca , NY 14853
|
|
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
OF THE GOAT |
The goat is a member
of a class of animals called ruminants. These animals
ruminate (chew their cud). Unlike us, they have special
four-compartment stomachs especially designed to digest
roughage (food high in fiber) such as grass, hay and
silage. |
The goat’s
stomach has four chambers: 1) the rumen, 2) the honey-combed
reticulum, 3) the omasum, and 4) the abomasum or true
stomach. The size relationship of the four chambers
changes as the animal grows up. The abomasum gets
proportionally smaller. To understand why this happens,
let’s consider the function of each compartment
and then review the goat’s diet. |
1) The rumen acts
as a big fermentation vat. Bacteria and protozoa in
the rumen supply enzymes to break down the fiber in
the goat’s feed. This is similar to how bacteria
can ferment the sugars in grape juice to make wine
in big wine barrels. The tiny organisms in the rumen
also help to build proteins from the feed and manufacture
all of the B vitamins needed by the goat. Many nutrients
that help provide the goat with energy are also absorbed
here. The fermentation process produces heat that
helps to keep the goat warm. |
When roughage is
eaten by the adult goat, it is chewed on, soaked with
saliva, and then swallowed. This bolus of food is
called “the cud”. It goes down into the
rumen to be attacked and broken down or digested by
the micro-organisms. At regular intervals the cud
is brought back up to the goat’s mouth to be
chewed on some more and then swallowed again. This
entire process is called rumination. If you watch
the goat’s neck carefully, you can see him swallow
and later regurgitate his cud. The goat will often
burp to get rid of the gas produced by all the fermentation
going on in his rumen. You can really smell the fermentation
process on his breath. If something causes the goat
to stop being able to burp up the gases, the gas will
build up and bloat or swell up his rumen and he may
become very sick with “bloat”. |
2) Once the food
particles of cud become small enough, they pass to
the second compartment or reticulum. Here any foreign
objects that may have been accidentally swallowed
with the feed settle out in the honeycomb structure
of the reticulum’s walls. Another name for the
reticulum is the “hardware stomach”. |
3) The fermenting
particles then pass on to the omasum. The omasum removes
the water from them and also absorbs more nutrients
called volatile fatty acids that help supply the goat
with energy. |
4) The particles
are then forced into the abomasum or true stomach.
Here, the particles are digested by the stomach acid,
hydrochloric acid (HCl). This form of digestion is
the same as what occurs in our stomachs. |
The remaining particles
are then passed on to the small intestine where most
of the nutrients are absorbed by the body and made
available to the goat. |
When a goat kid is
born, its rumen, reticulum and omasum are very tiny
and not useful. The goat kid depends on a liquid,
milk, not roughage for its feed source. When the kid
swallows milk, the milk goes directly to the abomasum
through the esophageal groove. Everytime the kid swallows,
a flap of skin at the entrance to the rumen folds
over to form a grove that bypasses the rumen and sends
the milk straight to the abomasum to be digested by
stomach acid. As the kid gets older, he starts trying
to consume roughage. The rumen becomes active and
starts to enlarge. Its population of micro-organisms
increases. The reticulum and omasum also respond to
the changes in diet by getting bigger. By the time
the kid is an adult goat, roughage is his main source
of food and his rumen is far larger than his abomasum. |
KID |
ADULT |
|
|
| 1- rumen, 2 - reticulum,
3 - omasum, 4 - abomasum |
|
| |
|
| |