. Scale bar, 2 mm. 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. The ceca in
birds are often paired, with many exceptions; parrots, for example, do not have ceca, while others may have a single cecum or even two pairs, like the
secretarybird. Most mammalian
herbivores have a relatively large cecum. In many species, it is considerably wider than the colon. For some herbivores such as
lagomorphs (rabbits, hares, pikas), easily digestible food is processed in the gastrointestinal tract and expelled as regular feces. But in order to get nutrients out of hard-to-digest fiber, lagomorphs ferment fiber in the cecum and then expel the contents as
cecotropes, which are reingested (cecotrophy). The cecotropes are then absorbed in the small intestine to utilize the nutrients. In contrast, obligate
carnivores, whose diets contain little or no plant matter, have a reduced cecum, which is often partially or wholly replaced by the
appendix.
bears, and the
red panda.
Hyraxes, unlike other mammals, have two paired ceca. Many fish have a number of small outpockets, called
pyloric ceca, along their intestine; despite the name, they are not
homologous with the cecum of amniotes – their function is to increase the overall area of the digestive epithelium. may also have structures with the same name, but these have no relationship with those of vertebrates. ==Gallery==