The three main nitrogenous wastes in animals are ammonia, urea, and uric acid. Ammonia is the most toxic and soluble in water, requiring a high volume of water for its excretion. Urea is less toxic and requires a moderate amount of water for excretion. Uric acid is the least toxic and least soluble, needing very little water for excretion.
Does not exist. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Whoever wrote this answer is as dum as a nut wastes excretion.
Organisms get rid of waste through processes such as excretion, respiration, and egestion. Excretion involves the removal of metabolic waste products from the body, while respiration eliminates carbon dioxide. Egestion is the process of expelling undigested food materials.
Hydrogen ion removal can occur through buffering, respiration (formation of water), and renal excretion (elimination through the kidneys). Buffers like bicarbonate act to combine with hydrogen ions to form a weak acid, which can be excreted. In respiration, hydrogen ions combine with oxygen to form water, reducing the concentration of hydrogen ions. The kidneys can eliminate excess hydrogen ions through urine to maintain acid-base balance.
Epidermis, lungs, and kidneys.
excretion, filtration and secretion!
liver, pancreas,stomach.
liver, pancreas,stomach.
Common nitrogenous wastes in urine are: urea, uric acid and ammonia.
The waste removal system, or excretory system,gastrointestinal tract, (GI tract.)
kidney,lung and heart
Waste Battery Acid