Yes freshwater fishes just like most fishes have excretory systems. In freshwater animals their body fluids are more concentrated than their surroundings, so their waste can easily gained by osmosis and kidneys produce dilute urine for excretion. So yeah........... freshwater fishes have excretory systems
crocodile excrete its nitrogenous waste through its cloacal opening
Oh, yes. In pretty much the normal fashion. A little string comes out of the back of the fish. Almost all animals excrete wastes. Fishes excrete an ammonia-based waste product.
Neither marine nor freshwater fish excrete urine or urea; both marine and freshwater fish excrete nitrogenous waste products as pure ammonia.
fresh water fish
Yes, ADH helps us to retain water but at the same time we need to excrete waste. As a result the urine that we do excrete is more concentrated with waste products.
They excrete faeces and uric acid from their cloaca.
Ferrets excrete to get rid of waste
Yes, you do. That waste is part of you, and when you excrete it (poop), then you will slightly lose weight.
They "excrete" oxygen, which for them is a waste product. They "excrete" oxygen, which for them is a waste product.
No, urine is not the only waste product that humans excrete. Humans also excrete waste solids as fecal matter, and waste gas - primarily carbon dioxide and water vapor.
All of the organs mentioned excrete waste. The lungs excrete carbon dioxide, the large intestine excretes solid waste, and the kidneys excrete nitrogenous waste.
yes