There are several digestion juices, starting with saliva in the mouth, but the digestion juice released into the small intestine is bile which is stored in the gall bladder.
If the gallbladder is functioning properly, it will pass the digestive juices to the small intestine.
the large intestine stores food that cant be digested anymore and absorbs salt and water
lysomes
The gallbladder stores and releases bile, which helps break down fats.
the mouth lungs small intestine large intestine
Well first we all know that the Pancreas is an auxiliary organ which means it is the one that stores the juices but, it doesn't store all the juices at once it also gives space for the food from the stomach pass by so it can enter the small intestine and into the large intestine
First it goes into the mouth,then it goes to the esophagus that takes the food from the mouth to the stomach,then it goes to the liver that puts in juices in the food,then it goes to the stomach,then it goes to the pancreas that produces several digested juices,then it goes to the small intestine that absorbs digested food,then it goes to the gall bladder that stores digested juices,finally it goes to the large intestine and it eliminates the waste.
the small intestine is the primary site for the digestion and absorption of food. the large intestine mainly functions to absorb excess water and electrolytes from undigested food particles. --thoughtfulobserver
The gallbladder functions to secrete cholecystokinin (CCK) when food enters the digestive tract. It also stores bile (which emulsifies fat to aid in digestion) and sends its contents to the duodenum.
none, it only stores extra bile from the liver until needed.
You can live without it. The gallbladder stores bile produced by the liver until needed in the small intestine for fat metabolism.
its the large intestine