One senses that no one is paying a blind bit of attention, for the affairs of the province are as taboo in British society as coprophagy. |
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Drylots were cleaned daily to remove waste and reduce the risk of coprophagy. |
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It is interesting to note that non-human animals do just this, by indulging in coprophagy when their internal ecology has been disturbed. |
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Yes, they indulge in coprophagy or, more bluntly, poo-eating. |
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Some animals have overcome this deficiency by consuming the faeces or cecal content containing the microbes using a strategy termed coprophagy or cecotrophy respectively. |
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Therefore, coprophagy may provide these termite species with dietary nitrogen. |
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The rodent then practices coprophagy, eating its own fecal pellets, so the nutrients can be absorbed by the gut. |
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In addition, baits have also been reported to possess secondary poisoning effect through necrophagy and coprophagy. |
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Freudians associate such things as coprophagy with the death instinct, but the familiar obsessions, as they come off here, are so gleefully extravagant — another organ, another fluid, another outrage! |
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We are told of Marx's genital carbuncles, Nietzsche's syphilitic coprophagy and Freud's cancerous cheek growth, so malodorous that it repelled his favorite dog, a chow. |
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Despite the apparent larval coprophagy and notably short oviscapt, it seems that Karliella sexpunctata is an obligate oviparous species. |
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The animals were housed in raised bottom mesh cages to prevent coprophagy and kept in environmentally controlled rooms, fed with standard diet and water ad libitum. |
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Coprophagy may be an adaptation, serving to populate the infant's gut with the needed microbiome for digestion. |
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