The large intestine.
Yup
Hangiri, it absorbs excess moisture and vinegar mix.
Water. Water is absorbed from the feces to make it well formed. Food is almost in liquid form as it enters the large intestine. It is important job of the large intestine to absorb the water from the feces. It will be inconvenient to pass the liquid feces. There will be loss of water and electrolytes also. It can endanger your life.
Well an animal cell do not need to hold water inside of its cells as much as plants do. Also, when a plant absorbs water, if it has excess, they are stored in the vacuoles which make them larger.
When you are very dehydrated, your body takes in whatever water it can find. One place water is taken from is your feces. Your colon absorbs extra water from your feces and the blood transports it to another body part that needs the water more. This makes you constipated, but it is better to be constipated and survive than to die from dehydration. When you eat very rarely, there is not enough material to make normal-sized bowel movements. If your bowel movements are too small, your rectum does not stretch enough to make you feel the need to pass stool, and you become constipated.
Feces are the waste products that the body was unable to digest. It is undigested food, fiber. the digestive juices, and water.
Human feces (or stools) are produced by the entire digestive system.
No. There are parasites in feces. Consuming feces can make dogs sick or have worms.
plants have a process called photosynthesis in which the plant absorbs sunlight a cell called chloroplast absorbs it and makes water and sugar
Your body takes on excess water and gets rid of what it doesn't need. If excess water was allowed to accumulate in the blood, you would have dilute, watery blood, which would not do its job properly.
Uh your whole digestive system. Specifically your large intestine, where your feces are expelled. You can include your kidneys, for they dispose of urine.
Consolidation of feces before elimination refers to the process of water absorption in the colon, which helps to make the stool more solid and compact. This process is important for the formation of a well-formed stool that can be easily eliminated from the body.