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Goats do need their gall bladder to aid in digestion.
The bible uses goats to symbolize evil in many instances
soccor used to be played with a goats bladder, then a leather ball filled with cloth, and now a soccor ball.
Transpiration
To urinate, if you mean the urinary bladder. If you mean the swim bladder, it is to be able to change its depth in the water. It has a way to vent air from the gills to the swim bladder, and from the swim bladder to the digestive tract. So the fish would inflate the bladder to be able to rise and deflate the bladder to go lower.
Perhaps the gratest benefit of transpiration is that it uses solar energy to drive passive movement of water and minerals from soil to leaves. The plant does not expend energy moving this water.
Evaporation of water through the plant's leaves is called transpiration.
This process is called transpiration.
This phenomenon is called transpiration.
By bladder stones I assume you mean urinary calculi. Feedlot sheep (and goats) are fed concentrates that are high in grain to fatten them before slaughter. Ruminant animals (cud chewers) like sheep, goats and cattle are designed by nature to eat grass, leaves, bark and other plants, NOT grains. Grains contain too much calcium, which leads to the formation of stones. Pet goats are often castrated males called "wethers". Goats are typically castrated at a very young age, and their urinary plumbing does not mature after castration. They are also often fed grain, which is unnecessary, and leads to the formation of stones.
osmosis or The Water Cycle: Transpiration- evaporation from the leaves of plants
The process of leaves giving off water vapor is transpiration.