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Humans and pigs both use the umbilical cord for fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes. Both send the waste back to the mother through the umbilical cord and then the mother excretes the waste.

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MzPbear

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2y ago

There isnt a difference between the fetal pig and human

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Q: What differences in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes account in a pig?
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What differences in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes account for the structural differences beteen pigs and humans?

There isn't a difference in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes between a pig and a human. Both send the waste back to the mother through the umbilical cord where the mother excretes the waste.


Why is feces not considered to be excreted?

Excretion is only the removal of cellular wastes, therefore faeces is not excretion, but elimination


How is nitrogen used and excreted by animals?

the nitrogen is released back into the environment.


What do you call nose wastes?

booger


Describe excretory system of reptiles?

Digestive and urogenital systemsThe digestive system of modern reptiles is similar in general plan to that of all higher vertebrates. It includes the mouth and its salivary glands, the esophagus, the stomach, and the intestine and ends in a cloaca. Of the few specializations of the reptilian digestive system, the evolution of one pair of salivary glands into poison glands in the venomous snakes is the most remarkable.During development the embryos of higher vertebrates (reptiles, birds, and mammals) consecutively develop three separate sets of kidneys; these are arranged in longitudinal sequence in the body cavity. The first set, the pronephroi, are vestigial organs left over from the evolutionary past that soon degenerate and disappear without having had any function. The second set, the mesonephroi, are the functional kidneys of adult amphibians, but their only contribution to the lives of reptiles is in providing the duct (the Wolffian duct) that forms a connection between the testes and the cloaca. The operational kidneys of reptiles, birds, and mammals are the last set, the metanephroi, which have separate ducts to the cloaca. The principal functions of the kidney are the removal of nitrogenous wastes resulting from the oxidation of proteins and the regulation of water loss. Vertebrates eliminate three kinds of nitrogenous wastes: ammonia, urea, and uric acid. Ammonia and urea are highly soluble in water, but uric acid is not. Ammonia is highly poisonous, urea is slightly poisonous, and uric acid is not poisonous at all.Among reptiles the form taken by the nitrogenous wastes is closely related to the habits and habitat of the animal. Aquatic reptiles tend to excrete a large proportion of these wastes as ammonia in aqueous solution. This method uses large amounts of water and is no problem for a freshwater resident, such as an alligator, which eliminates between 40 and 75 percent of its nitrogenous wastes as ammonia. Terrestrial reptiles, such as most snakes and lizards, must conserve body water, and they convert their nitrogenous wastes to insoluble, harmless uric acid, which forms a more or less solid mass in the cloaca. In snakes and lizards, these wastes are eliminated from the cloaca together with wastes from the digestive system.Prior to the evolution of the metanephric kidney, the products of the male gonad, the testis, traveled through the same duct with the nitrogenous wastes from the kidney. But with the appearance of the metanephros, the two systems became separated. The female reproductive system never shared a common tube with the kidney. Oviducts in all female vertebrates arise as separate tubes with openings usually near, but not connected to, the ovaries. The oviducts, like the Wolffian ducts of the testes, open to the cloaca. Both ovaries and testes lie in the body cavity near the kidneys.With the evolution of the reptilian egg, internal fertilization became necessary. The males of all modern reptiles, with the exception of tuataras, have functional copulatory organs. The structures vary from group to group, but all include erectile tissue as an important element of the operating mechanism, and all are protruded through the male's cloaca into that of the female during copulation. Unlike the penis of turtles and crocodiles, the copulatory organ of lizards and snakes is paired, with each unit being called a hemipenis. The hemipenes of lizards and snakes are elongated tubular structures lying in the tail. The penis of a crocodile or turtle is protruded through the cloacal opening wholly by means of a filling of blood space (sinuses) in the penis; protrusion of a lizard's or snake's hemipenis, however, is begun by a pair of propulsor muscles. Completion of the erection is brought about by blood filling the sinuses in the erectile tissue. Only one hemipenis is inserted into a female, but which one is a matter of chance. Unlike the penis of mammals, the copulatory organs of reptiles do not transport sperm through a tube. The ducts from the testes, as already mentioned, empty into the cloaca, and the sperm flow along a groove on the surface of the penis or hemipenis.

Related questions

What differences in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes account for the structural differences between pigs and humans?

There are no noticeable difference in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes which would account for the structural differences between pigs and humans. Waste is eliminated through urination.


What differences in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes account for difference of allatonic and urinary bladder?

UB


What differences in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes account for the structural differences beteen pigs and humans?

There isn't a difference in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes between a pig and a human. Both send the waste back to the mother through the umbilical cord where the mother excretes the waste.


What is the elimination of carbon dioxide by the lungs and elimation of nitrogenous wastes by the kidneys?

ExcretionExcretion


Embryo excretes nitrogenous wastes into it?

Embryos excretes nitrogenous wastes into the placenta.


What is the liquid waste product containing nitrogenous wastes?

Urine contains nitrogenous wastes.


What does the kidney excrete?

the kidney is referred to as an excretory organ and excretes urea, which is a less toxic form of uric acid.


Do lungs excrete nitrogenous wastes?

The urinary system excretes nitrogenous wastes. The lungs excrete carbon dioxide.


List three nitrogenous wastes that are routinely found in urine?

Common nitrogenous wastes in urine are: urea, uric acid and ammonia.


What kind of metabolic. wastes are removed by the excretory system?

nitrogenous wastes


The least toxic of nitrogenous wastes is?

Urea is the less toxic in nature among the nitrogenous wastes where as Ammonia is 100,000 times toxic than urea.


List Three main nitrogenous wastes of animals what is the relative need for water?

The three main nitrogenous wastes are ammonia, uric acid and urea.