blood in the fish carries the carbon dioxide to the gills where it releaseed into the water
Fish excrete salt, ions and urine. Fish get rid of carbon dioxide by diffusion through their gills.
they use their gills
Yes, but I'm not sure how.
yes, they do.
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h excrete
Because seawater is so salty, fish must pump out the excess salt. They do this through their kidneys and by using specialized cells in their gills.
Penguins excrete through their anus
A coating of mucous, I've been researching this and eels and bone fish are well known for this coating making them ultra slippery, I've come to the conclusion that all fish excrete mucous, please continue or correct me if u can
no
Ants do not technically urinate, because they excrete all waste through a single orifice, which is called the anus.
Neither marine nor freshwater fish excrete urine or urea; both marine and freshwater fish excrete nitrogenous waste products as pure ammonia.
crocodile excrete its nitrogenous waste through its cloacal opening
Oh, yes. In pretty much the normal fashion. A little string comes out of the back of the fish. Almost all animals excrete wastes. Fishes excrete an ammonia-based waste product.
Yes they do. Many organisms including mammals, fish, fungi and microorganisms do excrete urea.
yes
feces. In their feces is fish bones and stuff.
by their excretoy organ
fresh water fish
Tetras (unlike goldfish), do not excrete a lot, so in essence they would be "clean" fish.
Fish have: fins, eyes, organs, scales, etc Fish Do: Eat, sleep, breed, respire, swim, digest, excrete, react, etc.
Only sharks excrete urine through the skin
Saltwater fish are able to excrete(get rid of) salt via the gills and via the urine.