Yes, the skin eliminates heat, water, and sweat, among other things.
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they both help eliminate waste from the body
Yes, the skin acts as a barrier that helps eliminate waste products from the body through sweating. Sweating helps remove toxins and waste, such as urea and excess salts, from the body. Additionally, dead skin cells are constantly shed to help get rid of waste.
Your skin is apart of the excretory system because your skin contains sweat glands which is one of the ways to release a type of waste which is basically what the excretory system is all about.
excretory, urinary, respiratory, and lymphatic The excretory system removes solid, food waste from the body aka poop The urinary system removes liquid waste aka pee The respiratory system removes gaseous waste CO2 The Lymphatic system removes cellular waste and excretes it through the skin as sweat
No they just eliminate a waste. But some insects do wee
Blood vessels, good luck on the rest of the test!
No, swordfish do not excrete through their skin. They primarily excrete waste through their kidneys and gills, similar to other fish. The kidneys filter waste products from the bloodstream, while the gills help eliminate ammonia and other nitrogenous wastes.
eliminate waste.
Every organism (living thing) needs the ability to eliminate waste products, so yes.
Cars,planes,etc those can be some things the produce waste and that are non living.
No, human skin is not a respiratory organ. The primary respiratory organs in humans are the lungs, where gas exchange takes place between the air we breathe and our circulatory system. While skin plays a role in helping regulate body temperature and eliminate some waste products, it is not directly involved in the process of respiration.