Blood transports oxygen nutrients and wastes in mammals and fish .
The blood and the heart, though it doesnt move food as such, it transports nutrients.
Though body movement
Water is not considered a nutrient even though it contains nutrients because it is considered a transporter of nutrients. It transports the nutrients throughout the body.
nutrients, oxygen and blood
No blood is not a chemical. Though there is a lab test that is called a blood chemistry it actually shows things like minerals and CO2 dissolved in the blood. Blood is a vital body organ that transports sugar, nutrients, oxygen, CO2, and waste through the body.
Yes cells can live without soil. They do need oxygen, nutrients and water to live though.
Well, for one, not all mammals have four stomachs. Some do though, such as cows. They also could be for digesting different things or putting the nutrients from the digested food into different areas of the body.
Blood is the body's transport medium: it transports substances around the body. It carries hormones, nutrients, water and oxygen to places they are required(eg the muscles) and transports waste products such as carbon dioxide to places where they can be excreted. In a pregnant woman, the mother's and baby's blood exchange these substances, though they each have different blood supplies. White bloods cells(leukocytes) are also carried in blood as part of the immune system, protecting the body against infections.
Soil is healthier than paper towels because soil has nutrients even though paper towels are very absorbant but soil us healthier because of it's nutrients and oxygen
Though platypuses lay eggs, they are mammals as they have body hair.
They sure do! Just like you cats, dogs, horses, and giraffes are all placental mammals. Placental mammals develop inside their mother. Nutrients, oxygen, and wastes are exchanged between the developing embryo and the mother through a placenta. An umbilical cord connects the embryo to the placenta. The navel or belly button is where the umbilical cord was attached to the young placental mammal. So even though you may not notice it unless you look very carefully, dogs and cats do, indeed, have belly buttons.
They are transported from the placenta through the umbilical cord to the fetus. The baby takes nutrients and oxygen from the mother's blood, which travel's through the umbilical cord to the baby