urine
The Bladder
Liquid waste in rats is stored in the urinary bladder until it is eliminated from the body through urination.
Cellular waste is usually broken down into simpler compounds by the liver and eliminated from the body through urine or feces. Some waste products may also be stored temporarily in various organs or tissues until they can be processed and eliminated.
The bladder stores liquid waste (filtered out by the kidneys as urine) although urination is not the sole way to remove other forms of liquid waste. Some excretion also occurs via sweating, but neither are the sweat glands storage organs nor is sweating an adequate mechanism for removal of the total amount of liquid waste the body produces daily.
large intestine
Urine in the bladder.
Urine. It is stored in the urinary bladder.
Solid Wastes: The colon if you are constipated. Otherwise, waste is stored in the rectum before defecation. Since the colon is mainly where water absorption occurs, the longer waste stays there, the more dried out it becomes. Liquid Wastes: Liquid wastes are stored in the bladder after being removed by the Kidneys.
The liquid waste of the fetal pig is stored in the bladder until it is eliminated from the pig.
The Bladder
The bladder.
Liquid waste in rats is stored in the urinary bladder until it is eliminated from the body through urination.
To get rid of liquid waste in your body.People urinate because people eat and drink foods and liquids. They empty the digested food/liquid by urinating.Urine - to give it its medical term - is a waste product produced by the body processing food. It's temporarily stored in the bladder, which needs to be periodically emptied.
Cellular waste is usually broken down into simpler compounds by the liver and eliminated from the body through urine or feces. Some waste products may also be stored temporarily in various organs or tissues until they can be processed and eliminated.
The liquid that is filtered by the kidneys and then stored in the bladder is called urine. Contrary to popular belief, when urine exits the body, it is NOT sterile.
The bladder stores liquid waste (filtered out by the kidneys as urine) although urination is not the sole way to remove other forms of liquid waste. Some excretion also occurs via sweating, but neither are the sweat glands storage organs nor is sweating an adequate mechanism for removal of the total amount of liquid waste the body produces daily.
The Urethra carries urine (liquid waste) out of the body