Glands produce hormones.
By glands. Hormones are produced only by the endocrine glands, e.g., the pituitary, the adrenals, etc.. Hormones are "chemical messengers": they are sent by the glands to target organs and stimulate them to produce specific effects, e.g. the hormone thyroxin is manufactured by the thyroid gland to regulate the metabolism.
Semen is produced by several different glands and organs. Sperm is manufactured in the testes, and other substances come from the prostate, seminal vesicles, and the bulbourethral (Cowper's) gland.
Only in the sense that it is manufactured (produced naturally) by the mammary glands of the females of the species, during late pregnancy and whilst breast feeding their young.
Manufactured chiefly by the chromaffin cells of the adrenal glands, these hormones are involved in readying the body for the "fight-or-flight" response (also known as the alarm reaction).
There are the Salivary Glands, Cardiac glands, Pyloric glands, and the Fundic glands.
No. Apocrine glands are not sebaceous glands. They are specialized sweat glands.
sudoiferous glands
endocrine glands are glands without ducts.
Yes. The adrenal glands are ductless glands.
I'm not sure.. but I think those are: Salivary Glands Gastric Glands Bile Glands Pancreatic Glands Intestinal Glands
The two types of glands in a human body are ductless glands and duct glands. A few of the duct glands are tear ducts, sweat glands, and salivary glands.
There are many glands that make up the endocrine glands. These glands include the pancreas, the thymus gland, the pituitary gland, the pineal glands, and the adrenal glands.