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The study of human anatomy and physiology is one of the crucial Biology Topics for medical professionals and researchers.
Describe the Process of Nutrition in Amoeba with the help of Diagram
Amoeba is a unicellular animal. Amoeba eats tiny (microscopic) plants and animals as food that float in the water in which it lives. The mode of nutrition in Amoeba is Holozoic. The process of obtaining food by Amoeba is called phagocytosis (‘Phagocytosis’ means ‘cell feeding’). The various steps involved in the nutrition of Amoeba are ingestion, digestion, absorption, assimilation, and egestion. All the processes of nutrition are performed by the single cell of Amoeba. This is described below.
1. Ingestion
Amoeba has no mouth or a fixed place for the ingestion of food (intake of food). Amoeba ingests food by using its pseudopodia. When a food particle comes near Amoeba, the Amoeba ingests this food particle by forming temporary finger-like projections called pseudopodia around it. The food is engulfed with a little surrounding water to form a food vacuole inside the Amoeba. This food vacuole can be considered to be a ‘temporary stomach’ of Amoeba.
2. Digestion
In Amoeba, food is digested in the food vacuole by digestive enzymes. The enzymes from the surrounding cytoplasm enter into the food vacuole and break down the food into small and soluble molecules by chemical reactions. Thus, digestion in Amoeba takes place inside the food vacuole due to which the food dissolves (or food becomes soluble).
3. Absorption
The digested food present in the food vacuole of Amoeba is absorbed directly into the cytoplasm of Amoeba cells by diffusion, Since Amoeba consists of only one small cell, it does not require a blood system to carry the digested food. The digested food just spreads out from the food vacuole into the whole of the Amoeba cell. After absorption of food, the food vacuole disappears.
4. Assimilation
A part of the food absorbed in Amoeba cells is used to obtain energy through respiration. The remaining part of absorbed food is used to make the parts of the Amoeba cell that lead to the growth of Amoeba. Thus, on assimilating food, Amoeba grows in size. And then Amoeba can reproduce by dividing into two daughter cells.
5. Egestion
Amoeba has no fixed place (like an anus) for removing the undigested part of the food. When a considerable amount of undigested food collects inside Amoeba, then its cell membrane suddenly ruptures at any place and the undigested food is thrown out of the body of Amoeba.
Paramecium is also a tiny unicellular animal that lives in water. Paramecium uses its hair-like structures called cilia to sweep the food particles from the water and put them into its mouth. The Paramecium has thin, hair-like cilia all over its body. The cilia move back and forth rapidly in water. When the cilia present around the mouth region of Paramecium move back and forth, they sweep the food particles present in the water into the mouth of Paramecium. This is the first step in the nutrition of Paramecium which is called ingestion. Ingestion is followed by other steps such as digestion, absorption, assimilation, and egestion (as explained in the case of Amoeba).
Nutrition in Complex Multicellular Animals
In complex multicellular animals like man (humans), grasshoppers, fish, frogs, etc., all the processes involved in nutrition are performed by a combination of digestive organs. This combination of digestive organs is called the digestive system. We will now describe all the processes in the nutrition of complex multicellular animals by taking the example of nutrition in human beings. Please note that a long tube running from the mouth to the anus of a human being (or other animals) in which digestion and absorption of food take place is called an alimentary canal. The alimentary canal is also called the ‘gut’. Let us now study the nutrition in human beings.