DAZLEY, J.S.; FARMER, C.G.; MOORE, J; CLAYTON, F.; University of Utah; University of Utah; Veterans Administration Hospital; Veterans Administration Hospital: Esophageal Structure and Function in the American alligator
An appreciation of the usefulness of reptiles as model organisms to study regulatory physiology of the gastrointestinal system is increasing. In contrast to most mammals, that generally eat relatively small meals at frequent intervals, many carnivorous reptiles consume extremely large meals infrequently. Thus, the regulatory responses to feeding can be very pronounced in reptiles compared to mammals. Furthermore, reptiles do not provoke the same level of controversy surrounding animal research that mammals do. Recent research on the reptilian gastrointestinal system has focused on responsed to feeding that occur in the lower gastrointestinal tract. Relatively little recent work has examined the upper GI tract. For these reasons, we undertook a study of esophageal structure and function in the American alligator. Five juvenile, (