Herbivore noun
Oxford Dictionary definition: Plant-eating animal
Our definition: Herbivores are animals which are anatomically designed to live on plants. Herbivorous mammals have well-developed facial musculature, fleshy lips, a relatively small opening into the oral cavity and a thickened, muscular tongue. The lips aid in the movement of food into the mouth and, along with the facial (cheek) musculature and tongue, assist in the chewing of food. The lower jaw of plant-eating mammals has a pronounced sideways motion when eating. This lateral movement is necessary for the grinding motion of chewing.
The dentition of herbivores is quite varied depending on the kind of vegetation a particular species is adapted to eat. Although these animals differ in the types and numbers of teeth they posses, the various kinds of teeth when present, share common structural features. The incisors are broad, flattened and spade-like. Canines may be small as in horses, prominent as in hippos, pigs and some primates (these are thought to be used for defense) or absent altogether. The molars, in general, are squared and flattened on top to provide a grinding surface. The molars cannot vertically slide past one another in a shearing/slicing motion (as carnivores’ teeth do), but they do horizontally slide across one another to crush and grind. The surface features of the molars vary depending on the type of plant material the animal eats. The teeth of herbivorous animals are closely grouped so that the incisors form an efficient cropping/biting mechanism, and the upper and lower molars form extended platforms for crushing and grinding.
These animals carefully and methodically chew their food, pushing the food back and forth into the grinding teeth with the tongue and cheek muscles. This thorough process is necessary to mechanically disrupt plant cell walls in order to release the digestible intracellular contents and ensure thorough mixing of this material with their saliva. This is important because the saliva of plant-eating mammals often contains carbohydrate-digesting enzymes which begin breaking down food molecules while the food is still in the mouth.
Because of the relative difficulty with which various kinds of plant foods are broken down (due to large amounts of indigestible fibres), herbivores have significantly longer and in some cases, far more elaborate guts than carnivores. Herbivorous animals that consume plants containing a high proportion of cellulose must “ferment” (digest by bacterial enzyme action) their food to obtain the nutrient value. They are classified as either “ruminants” (foregut fermenters) or hindgut fermenters. The ruminants are the plant-eating animals with the celebrated multiple-chambered stomachs. Herbivorous animals that eat a diet of relatively soft vegetation do not need a multiple-chambered stomach. They typically have a simple stomach, and a long small intestine. These animals ferment the difficult-to-digest fibrous portions of their diets in their hindguts (colons). Many of these herbivores increase the sophistication and efficiency of their GI tracts by including carbohydrate-digesting enzymes in their saliva.
In herbivorous animals, the large intestine tends to be a highly specialized organ involved in water and electrolyte absorption, vitamin production and absorption, and/or fermentation of fibrous plant materials. The colons of herbivores are usually wider than their small intestine and are relatively long.
“Thus, from comparing the gastrointestinal tract of humans to that of carnivores, herbivores and omnivores we must conclude that humankind’s GI tract is designed for a purely plant-food diet.”


V. – This is one of the few things I remember from college. 😀 That we evolved as plant-eating beings. I always found this fascinating; and wondered how we got to where we are today.
I still wonder.
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Me too. Can you imagine the reaction to the first person that said “mmm, that dead body looks tasty – let’s try it” ? 😀
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That’s so wrong. But so funny. 😉
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😉
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Reblogged this on Go Green Or Go To Hell and commented:
Green!!!
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Thanks for the reblog 🙂
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This is fascinating stuff! I like hearing about the different kinds of herbivores, like cows and hippos. Brilliant 🙂
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Thank you 🙂
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We’ve been feeding a wild bunny all winter. He looks like this one, though he was as small as my fist last fall. I would LOVE it if he learn not to fear us to this extent. Not yet, but he does let us come fairly close–when the dogs aren’t with us, of course.
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Aw, that’s lovely, but it’s probably a good thing that he doesn’t trust you because if he did, he wouldn’t realise that not all humans are nice and it might make him vulnerable.
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Great pic!!!
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Thanks, it was a good find 🙂
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You are very welcome
Yes!!! What a fabulous idea, a great way to learn the alphabet!
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Thank you so much. It is very interesting, the stuff I’m finding out 🙂
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Yes indeed! 🙂
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