men
A goose does not have a urinary system like we human, or other mammals do. Instead of a urethra that is separate from the anus, birds have a cloaca that serves as both a urinary and fecal exit from the body.
From the same place it exits the female body: the urethra. The male and female bodies are actually very similar in this regard; most female and male reproductive organs have a counterpart in the other sex. The main difference is that female organs are mostly inside the body, while male organs are mostly outside the body.
It exit through the....
From stage of the cell cycle do cells somtimes exit?
scatter
Sperm are made in the testis, carried from the testis to the epididymis via the rete testis, where they undergo further maturation. During ejaculation, sperm travel from the epididymis via the vas deferens, which joins the duct of the seminal vesicle to form the ejaculatory duct. The ejaculatory duct passes through the prostate, and joins the urethra. Sperm exit the body via the urethra. Source: wikipedia.
Ejaculation
sperm starts it journey via vas deferens and connects with urethra at the level of prostate and exit via penile urethra.passage from proatate is common for both urine and sperm...
To compare and contrast the function of the urethra in male and female pigs, it is important to understand that the urethra serves the same purpose in both. The urethra functions to carry urine from the bladder to be expelled by the body. The urethra is also a part of the reproductive organs in male and female pigs.
The Urethra.
The urethra is the name of the tube structure through which urine is excreted from the body.
Urine exits the male body through the urethra, which passes through the penis.
pig entestines
A woman's urethra is located at the bottom of the public bone. It is in front of the vagina.
sure can, I have one about 1 inch from the exit. I can feel it with my hand.
A monotreme is a mammal that lays eggs. The word itself is from the Greek language meaning single hole referring to the monotremes cloaca, the urinary, defecation, and reproductive systems all exit from a single duct. Monotremes lay eggs
The portals of exit for chlamydia are the urethra, vagina, and rectum.