“…In the pig, for example, while those enzymes concerned with the digestion of maltose, sucrose and starch increase in activity from soon after birth, the ability to digest cellulose in the foregut never develops. On the other hand, in 'foregut fermented such as ruminants, and probably also in many marsupials (Hume, 1982), while the enzymes necessary for the digestion of the nutrients in milk are present at birth, the enzymes required for the digestion of maltose and starch are virtually absent, and for sucrose totally absent, so that the utilization of these carbohydrates, and of cellulose, must await the establishment of a microbial population and, in the case of the ruminants, the maturing of the rumen mucosa (Walker & Walker, 1961;Walker & Simmonds, 1962).…”