The bladder.
The liquid waste of the fetal pig is stored in the bladder until it is eliminated from the pig.
Liquid waste in rats is stored in the urinary bladder until it is eliminated from the body through urination.
Liquid waste stored temporarily in the body is called urine, which is produced by the kidneys as a result of filtering waste products from the blood. Urine is stored in the urinary bladder until it is eliminated from the body through the urethra.
Cellular waste is usually broken down into simpler compounds by the liver and eliminated from the body through urine or feces. Some waste products may also be stored temporarily in various organs or tissues until they can be processed and eliminated.
The organ that changes liquid waste to feces is the large intestine, also known as the colon. It absorbs water and electrolytes from the liquid waste produced in the digestive process, transforming it into a more solid form. The remaining waste is then stored in the rectum until it is eliminated from the body. This process is crucial for maintaining hydration and electrolyte balance.
Liquid waste is stored in the bladder (and discharged as urine).
The waste that your body does not need is stored in your large intestine until it is eliminated as feces. Your kidneys remove excess water from this waste to concentrate it into a solid form before it is eliminated from your body.
If everything's working right, water is reabsorbed by the colon.
it is stored in your bladder.
Solid Wastes: The colon if you are constipated. Otherwise, waste is stored in the rectum before defecation. Since the colon is mainly where water absorption occurs, the longer waste stays there, the more dried out it becomes. Liquid Wastes: Liquid wastes are stored in the bladder after being removed by the Kidneys.
Solid waste is stored in the colon, while liquid waste is absorbed in the colon to form solid stool.
Liquid waste is eliminated from a frog through its kidneys, which filter waste and excess substances from the blood to produce urine. Urine then travels through the ureters to the cloaca, where it is expelled from the body as waste.