The BBC is running an article originally from The Conversation -
all about the physics of defecation. (There's a phrase you don't hear often in a lifetime.) A highlight (if that's the appropriate word):
What else did we learn? Bigger animals have longer feces. And bigger
animals also defecate at higher speed. For instance, an elephant
defecates at a speed of six centimeters per second, nearly six times as
fast as a dog. The speed of defecation for humans is in between: two
centimeters per second.
Together, this meant that defecation
duration is constant across many animal species – around 12 seconds
(plus or minus 7 seconds) – even though the volume varies greatly.
Assuming a bell curve distribution, 66 percent of animals take between 5
and 19 seconds to defecate. It's a surprisingly small range, given that
elephant feces have a volume of 20 liters, nearly a thousand times more
than a dog's, at 10 milliliters. How can big animals defecate at such
high speed?
The answer, we found, was in the properties of an ultra-thin layer of mucus lining the walls of the large intestine.
The mucus layer is as thin as human hair, so thin that we could measure
it only by weighing feces as the mucus evaporated. Despite being thin,
the mucus is very slippery, more than 100 times less viscous than feces.
During
defecation, feces moves like a solid plug. Therefore, in ideal
conditions, the combined length and diameter of feces is simply
determined by the shape of one's rectum and large intestine. One of the
big findings of our study was that feces extend halfway up the length of
the colon from the rectum.
Putting the length of feces together with the properties of mucus, we
now have a cohesive physics story for how defecation happens. Bigger
animals have longer feces, but also thicker mucus, enabling them to
achieve high speeds with the same pressure. Without this mucus layer,
defecation might not be possible. Alterations in mucus can contribute to
several ailments, including chronic constipation and even infections by bacteria such as C. difficile in the gastrointestinal tract.
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