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Seasonal variation in gut morphology in wild rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
Authors:R M Sibly    K A Monk    I K Johnson  and R C Trout
Institution:Department of Pure and Applied Zoology, University of Reading, Reading RG6 AJ
Abstract:It is shown experimentally that diet composition affected the sizes of several digestive organs in juvenile rabbits collected from the wild. Stomach weight, small intestine volume and colon length were larger in rabbits reared on diets higher in fibre. Small intestine weight, however, was lower.
Analysis of natural variation in wild adult rabbits showed that all digestive organs (except for the appendix) were larger in rabbits living on chalk soils than in those living on sand or clay. Seasonal variation was more marked in males than in females, probably because of the sexes' different breeding requirements. Thus most male digestive organs were smaller between December and June than at other times of year. Female digestive organs did not show this pattern, and were largest in May/June, when the demands of pregnancy and lactation are highest. However, food quality may have been important too. Food quality is probably highest in April, and most digestive organs were then smallest (both sexes). The dry weights of stomach and small intestine did not fit these patterns. Stomach weight increased with the presence of the nematode parasite Graphidium strigosum and small intestine and caecal volumes with the presence of cestodes. Numbers of nematodes (Trichostrongylus retortaeformis and Passalurus ambiguus) in the caecum or colon, however, had no effects on organ sizes.
Data are presented on variation in intensity and prevalence of these helminth parasites with season and soil type.
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