The third division of the stomach of a ruminant animal, located between the abomasum and the reticulum. Also called manyplies.
[Latin omāsum, bullock's tripe, probably of Celtic origin.]
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The third division of the stomach of a ruminant animal, located between the abomasum and the reticulum. Also called manyplies.
[Latin omāsum, bullock's tripe, probably of Celtic origin.]
The third and smallest compartment of the forestomachs of the ruminant. Connects with the reticulum through the reticulo-omasal orifice and with the abomasum through the omasoabomasal orifice. Called also the bible because of its many, tightly packed leaves.
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
the third compartment of the stomach of a ruminant
Synonyms: psalterium, third stomach
The omasum, also known as the bible[1], the fardel[1], the manyplies[1] and the psalterium[1], is the third compartment of the stomach in ruminants. Though its functions have not been well-studied, it appears to primarily aid in the absorption of water, magnesium, and the volatile fatty acids produced by rumen fermentation. The numerous folds of its mucosa are thought to trap digesta particles to increase their residence time for this said absorption.
There is some evidence that the contractions of the omasum can propel large particles backwards through the reticulorumen orifice, the junction connecting the omasum with the reticulorumen, into the reticulorumen, the first compartment of the ruminant stomach. In this way, the omasum allows large particles, which still likely contain appreciable amounts of fermentable substrate, to be further digested in the reticulorumen. (Though fermentation initiated in the reticulorumen can continue in the omasum, it does so in only limited quantities, so this mechanism of ejecting largely unfermented particles into the reticulorumen is necessary for complete fermentation.)
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