The
animal and its food
The water content of the animal body
varies with age. The newborn animal contains from 750 to 800 g/kg water but
this falls to about 500 g/kg in the mature fat animal. It is vital to the life
of the organism that the water content of the body be maintained: an animal
will die more rapidly if deprived of water than if deprived of food. Water
functions in the body as a solvent in which nutrients are transported about the
body and in which waste products are excreted. Many of the chemical reactions
brought about by enzymes take place in solution and involve hydrolysis. Because
of the high specific heat of water, large changes in heat production can take
place within the animal with very little alteration in body temperature. Water
also has a high latent heat of evaporation, and its evaporation from the lungs
and skin gives it a further role in the regulation of body temperature.
The animal obtains its water from
three sources: drinking water, water present in its food and metabolic water,
this last being formed during metabolism by the oxidation of hydrogen-containing
organic nutrients. The water content of foods is very variable and can range
from as little as 60 g/kg in concentrates to over 900 g/kg in some root crops.
Because of this great variation in water content, the composition of foods is
often expressed on a dry matter basis, which allows a more valid comparison of
nutrient content. This is illustrated in Table 3. which lists a few examples of
plant and animal products.
The water content of growing plants
is related to the stage of growth, being greater in younger plants than in
older plants. In temperate climates the acquisition of drinking water is not
usually a problem and animals are provided with a continuous supply. There is
no evidence that under normal conditions an excess of drinking water is
harmful, and animals normally drink what they require.
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