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- B5d127e1f8ebfd313b87d3188c93d4231 source "WP" @default.
- B5d127e1f8ebfd313b87d3188c93d4231 type Axiom @default.
- B5d127e1f8ebfd313b87d3188c93d4231 annotatedProperty UBPROP_0000008 @default.
- B5d127e1f8ebfd313b87d3188c93d4231 annotatedSource UBERON_0001153 @default.
- B5d127e1f8ebfd313b87d3188c93d4231 annotatedTarget "A cecum is present in most amniote species, and also in lungfish, but not in any living species of amphibian. In reptiles, it is usually a single median structure, arising from the dorsal side of the large intestine. Birds typically have two paired ceca, as, unlike other mammals, do hyraxes. Most mammalian herbivores have a relatively large cecum, hosting a large number of bacteria, which aid in the enzymatic breakdown of plant materials such as cellulose; in many species, it is considerably wider than the colon. In contrast, obligatory carnivores, whose diets contain little or no plant material, have a reduced cecum, which is often partially or wholly replaced by the vermiform appendix. Many fish have a number of small outpocketings, called pyloric ceca, along their intestine; despite the name they are not homologous with the cecum of amniotes, and their purpose is to increase the overall area of the digestive epithelium.[2] Some invertebrates, such as squid,[3] may also have structures with the same name, but these have no relationship with those of vertebrates." @default.