5 Things I Didn't Know about Poop
I have poop on the brain today. Someone gave my 6-month old son Jack a copy of Everyone Poops
even though we're nowhere near that stage yet. Still, it's a
fascinating book, and got me thinking about how little I know about
poop. While the following facts aren't found in Gomi's book, they're
still pretty nifty.
1. Bird poop is white
because birds can't pee. Their kidneys work like ours do, but instead
of producing urine, birds excrete a white paste. The paste, along with
what comes out of the intestines, unites and is excreted through the
bird's cloaca, a multi-purpose hole which means sewer in Latin. And, yes, by multi-purpose, I mean they even mate through it.
2. Many dogs eat poop. This I know because, sadly, my dog used to eat his own poop on occasion. What I didn't know was that eating poop has a name: coprophagy,
and is, of course, more popular with dung beetles than dogs. If your
dog eats his/her own feces, one way to discourage the behavior (other
than immediately cleaning up after your dog) is to douse the poop with
hot sauce or vinegar.
3. The reason why some poops float
is because they have a lot of gas in them. Rather than coming out as
flatulence, the gas gets stuck in the poop and forces it to the surface
of the water. If there's a lot of fat in your diet, likewise your poop
might float.
4. Cavemen were better equipped
to chew and digest many plants and vegetables. They had larger molars
and longer digestive tracts better at handling foods rich in
indigestible cellulose, like, er, corn, for instance. Evolution has
worked against our ability to chew and digest corn, which is why when
some kernels get swallowed whole they appear in poop.
5. The word poop comes from the Middle English word poupen or popen, which used to be the root of the word we now call a fart. Clearly poop has onomatopoeic origins.
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