The enzymes required to break down fat and lipids (fats) in our diet are found in the stomach/intestines. It would not be efficient to absorb the nutrients from our food that far away from the stomach/intestines.
The process of digestion begins as soon as food enters the mouth. Lean meat is chewed in the mouth by the teeth and is broken down further by saliva. From there it passes through the esophagus and into the stomach where it is assimilated with the aid of enzymes. Lean meat is digested by the body much easier than fatty meat.
no it doesnt
NO Colin doesnt eat meat
No. Never. They do not need stomach acid, which is there to aid in the digestion of meat. Zebras do not eat meat.
Smosh - 2006 Meat in Your Mouth was released on: USA: 16 December 2011
they eat little bits of mince meat and bolied eat (no shell), insects and sometimes veggies
No, they cannot,because they are herbivores. I read somewhere that it will mess up its digestion if it eats meat...
It's fairly simple. Any animal that eats plants is a herbivore. as humans, we are omnivores as we eat both plants and animals. Plants store their energy as starch, or amylose. This is a very long molecule that takes a long time to break down. Therefore, in the herb/omnivore's saliva is an enzyme called amylase. This starts to break down starch molecules in plant matter in the mouth. On the other hand, carnivores eat meat- predominantly proteins. Protein will be digested in the stomach and small intestine once the stomach acid and protease enzymes break down there molecules. As meat doesn't contain starch, starting digestion in the mouth would be pointless.
After a persons stomach was surgically removed the chemical digestion of ingested protein would probably begin in the
Breaking Los Angeles - 2011 Meat Mouth was released on: USA: 21 December 2011
In the stomach.
Yes u can it doesnt have a effect