In the sweat glands.
Some mammals have sweat glands, but not all. Most furbearing animals, like dogs and cats, have no sweat glands; the fur would keep the sweat from evaporating and defeat the purpose of having them. Animals with no sweat glands cool off by panting.
Eccrine glands are the most abundant sweat glands and they are also over your body and function throughout your lifetime.
Dogs do not sweat from their necks or bodies like humans do. They are different. They sweat from their tongues and from their pads and feet.
yes.
eccrine sweat glands
The sweat glands secrete acids and oils that prevent the growth of most pathogens.
Goblet cells
In humans, apocrine and merocrine sweat glands form the primary method of cooling.
Most cattle of European origin have their sweat glands in their noses. Brahman, Nelore, Guzerat, Afrikan and other long-eared loose-skinned breeds of the subspecies Bos taurus indicushave sweat glands in their skin and noses.
Dogs only sweat through their feet. Dogs reduce their temperature by panting which cools them by evaporating water from their tongue. Dogs cannot sweat as we do, as they have very few sweat glands and most of these are in their foot pads. They mainly cool themselves down by panting and breathing, with the lining of the lungs as the evaporative surface.
Your arm pits is what sweats the most because it has the most sweat glands in the body.
That would be primarily the Pituitary gland in your brain. (pitt-OO-ih-tare-ee)