Humans have paired salivary glands.
In humans, apocrine and merocrine sweat glands form the primary method of cooling.
Cat scent glands are on their paw pads and on the corners of their mouths.
The endocrine organs you would expect to be relatively larger in humans than cats include the thymus and the adrenal glands. Adrenal glands are also known as suprarenal glands.
yes
There really is no such thing as "secondary sex glands" in any mammal. The sex glands, secondary or not, are the ovaries. These are what determine estrous cycles and detection of pregnancy. The hypothalamus and the pituitary glands in the brain also have to do with the reproductive cycle of a cow, but they are also not described as "secondary sex glands."
The structure in humans that the digestive glands are comparable with crayfish are the glands that are found in the mouth and the stomach. These glands will secrete salivary amylase and HCI respectively to aid digestion in humans.
Cats do not have sweat glands unlike humans.
There are animals who have "poo glands", humans don't.
Humans have paired salivary glands.
yes
In humans, apocrine and merocrine sweat glands form the primary method of cooling.
About four of them
Humans have various glands and hormones which help for proper functioning. This is a sentence using glands and hormones.
primary is inhibiting glands secondary has to do with problems with the pituitary gland
Cat scent glands are on their paw pads and on the corners of their mouths.
The endocrine organs you would expect to be relatively larger in humans than cats include the thymus and the adrenal glands. Adrenal glands are also known as suprarenal glands.