Sunday, July 4, 2010

Science ----Locomorph

Scientists peer inside a python to see 

swallowed rat



Scientists have used the latest imaging techniques to look inside a python that had just swallowed a rat whole.
The resulting footage is part of a project using hi-tech scanning methods to explore animals' anatomy.
It took 132 hours for snake to fully digest the rat, the scientists said. Their work has revealed other strange insights into python digestion.
They presented the study at the Society for Experimental Biology's annual meeting in Prague, Czech Republic.
The researchers carried out a computer tomography or CT scan of an anaesthetised 5kg Burmese python one hour after it had devoured the rat whole.
Burmese python (Image: MR Research Center, Aarhus University 
Hospital, Denmark) The MRI study revealed how the python's organs altered as it digested its meal They also used a technique called magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to study the creature's internal organs.
By using contrast agents, the scientists were able to highlight specific organs and make them appear in different colours.
A series of MRI images revealed the gradual disappearance of the rat's body. At the same time, the snake's intestine expanded, its gall bladder shrank and its heart increased in volume by 25%.
The researchers, Henrik Lauridsen and Kasper Hansen, both from Aarhus University in Denmark, explained that the increase in the size of the snake's heart was probably associated with the energy it needed to digest its meal.
"It's a sit and wait predator," explained Mr Lauridsen. "It fasts for months and then eats a really large meal.
"It can eat the equivalent of up to 50% of its own bodyweight, and in order to get the energy out of the meal, it has to restart the intestinal system very fast."
Alligator (Image: MR Research Center, Aarhus University Hospital, 
Denmark) Contrast agents allow the researchers to highlight specific internal organs The researchers, who are both based at the university's Department of Zoophysiology and the MR Research Centre at Aarhus, say that their approach has several advantages over the "subjective and sometimes misleading" interpretations of dissections.
Dissection induces changes, explained Dr Hansen. "For example, after opening the dense bone of a turtle shell, the lungs will collapse due to the change in pressure.
"And to use these techniques you don't have to kill the animal," he added. "We can do this using live animals and revisit the results over and over again."
The images, they say, will be valuable tools in future studies of animal anatomy for both research and education.
As part of the EU project called Locomorph, they have produced similarly spectacular images of several other species, including frogs, alligators, turtles, swamp eels and bearded dragons

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