Date: May 18, 2016
Source: University of
Wisconsin-Madison
A stomachache can put a real
damper on your love life -- especially if you're a giant panda.
One minute it's breeding season
and you're happily dining on fresh bamboo leaves, the next you're left
clutching your stomach while your gastrointestinal lining passes through your
system. It exits your body as a thick, gooey, gelatinous mass.
This is exactly what seems to
happen to captive giant pandas, and the researchers behind a new study
published in Frontiers in Microbiology are beginning to suspect it
may play a role in their struggles to reproduce.
"We think they are sloughing
off the internal mucous membrane of their gastrointestinal tract and because of
this, they get really sick, which coincides with gestation," says Garret
Suen, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of bacteriology and co-author
of the panda poop and feeding behavior study. "The pandas stop eating and
they produce these painful, membranous fecal pellets."
No one quite understands why
these gelatinous masses, called mucoids, happen but Suen and his co-authors
believe bamboo may be a factor. Evolutionarily speaking, giant pandas are not
built to eat a sole diet of bamboo. As bears, their digestive systems are
designed to break down meat and small amounts of plant material, yet in the
wild and in captivity these bears are exclusively herbivorous. The study
suggests this may lead to digestive troubles that could negatively affect panda
pregnancy. It motivated the researchers to take a closer look at the gut
bacteria involved.
"Gastrointestinal diseases
are a major cause of mortality in wild and captive pandas but scientists understand
very little about their digestive process," says co-author Ashli Brown
Johnson, state chemist and Mississippi State University associate professor of
biochemistry, molecular biology, entomology and plant pathology. "By
studying the microbial community in the panda's gastrointestinal tract, we gain
a better understanding of panda nutrition, which could help improve the health
and reproduction of the endangered species."
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