no, excretion is when you need the loo
Most plants have special structures on their leaves called stomates. Carbon dioxide is drawn into the leaf tissue through these pore-like structures.
Both the internal as the external anal sphincter.
The name of the process that requires oxygen is aerobic respiration. Aerobic respiration takes in oxygen and releases carbon dioxide.
Electricity is only indirectly related to the greenhouse effect since it is not a greenhouse gas, however, a lot of electric generation is done by burning fossil fuels, which of course does release carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas. Any use of electricity has what can be called a "carbon footprint". Of course, that is also true of everything that human beings do. Everything has some degree of impact on global carbon dioxide levels; even breathing releases carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide is excreted from the lungs.
an excretion is an example of breathing out Co2
The process of removing waste products from the body is called excretion. This process involves eliminating metabolic wastes such as carbon dioxide, urea, and excess salts from the body to maintain homeostasis.
Respiration is breathing in and absorbing oxygen, and breathing out carbon dioxide.
Raccoons excrete solid wastes in the form of feces. Liquid wastes are excreted in urine. Carbon dioxide is excreted during breathing.
The respiratory system does "take away" carbon dioxide by replacing it with oxygen, through breathing. Exhaling causes the body to expel carbon dioxide and inhale oxygen.
There is carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. You have been breathing it in all your life.
There is a part of the brain called the medulla oblongata which detects increased carbon dioxide levels in the blood and triggers the breathing reflex. Breathing then allows the excess carbon dioxide to escape by way of the lungs, as oxygen is acquired.
fossil fuels and breathing causes carbon dioxide :)
respitatory, taking oxygen in...and breathing carbon dioxide out. carbon dioxide=Co2 and oxygen = O
breathing
carbon dioxide
lungs