A frog removes liquid and solid wastes through a process called "Excretion". Indigestable solid waste is removed by bowel movements, and liquid toxins are cleared from the body by urination. Excretion also takes place when a frog breathes out carbom dioxide.
Yes, that is how they get rid of their bodily wastes.
The Excretory system gets rid of wastes.
Most plants do not have solid wastes. Only those plants that eat insects have solid wastes. The venus fly trap and sundew let the rotted bodies of insects fly away in the wind when they open up. In the pitcher plant, the rotted bodies decompose in the bottom of the water trap. Plants that do not eat insects do not have any solid wastes to get rid of. They get their nutrients from the soil with their roots, they also take in water, and take in carbon dioxide and give off oxygen. They do not have solid wastes.
The large intestine gets rid of the solid waste after reabsorbing extra water. The waste is excreted through the rectum in the form of feces.
The circulatory, endocrine, muscular, and nervous systems help rid the body of wastes via the kidneys. The muscular and nervous systems help rid the body of solid wastes via the rectum. The nervous and circulatory systems help rid the body of wastes via the skin. The circulatory, skeletal, nervous, and muscular systems help the respiratory system rid the body of gaseous wastes.
The digestive system gets rid of undigested solid food wastes in the form of feces.
Monkeys get rid of their wastes in the same way that humans get rid of waste. Monkeys have a digestive tract and excretory system that allow the animal to remove liquid waste through urination and solid waste through defecation.
no
All living creatures must get rid of body wastes, both solid and liquid. Many animals do not have separate systems for disposing of these wastes as say, mammals do. Mammals (placental animals) have an advanced specialization. Birds, reptiles, and amphibians make do with the one vent, the Cloaca. (Latin for sewer). In birds at least, this organ also embodies the sex functions. It is difficult to imagine fish with a need for separation of liquid and solid wastes. More primitive (my words) animals such as monotremes and maybe some kangaroo demonstrate traces of the early cloaccal development.
To get rid of the frogs under the house it is important to have the compound professionally drained to get rid of the frogs. It is however important to note that frogs eat insects such as mosquitoes in the garden.
yes cheetahs does get rid of their waste.
hi