Vacuoles merge with the cell membrane and then open
the excretory system gets rid of all your body's waste, and prevents the pathogens from entering and exiting the body.
The body gets rid of waste products primarily through the kidneys, which filter waste from the blood to produce urine that is excreted out of the body. Other waste products are eliminated through the lungs (carbon dioxide), skin (sweat), and intestines (feces).
It either gets barfed back up or goes into the toilet
The kidney gets rid of urea, a waste product generated from the breakdown of proteins in the body. Urea is removed from the blood by the kidneys and excreted in the urine.
The excretory system is responsible for the process by which an organism eliminates waste products from its body. This system includes organs such as the kidneys, liver, lungs, and skin, which work together to remove metabolic waste, excess salts, and toxins from the body. This is essential for maintaining the body's internal environment in balance.
Kidney, ureter, urinary bladder and urethra.
water flushes out all waste from the body
Cellular Reproduction
The body gets rid of cell wastes through processes such as urination, defecation, sweating, and exhalation. These waste products are filtered out by the kidneys, liver, and lungs, and then excreted through urine, feces, sweat, and breath.
The anus gets rid of solid waste in the human body
One part of the human body that is like lysosomes is the stomach. The human intestines are also like lysosomes.
Euglena get rid of waste through a process called exocytosis. They store waste in specialized compartments within their cell called vacuoles, and then release the waste outside the cell when the vacuoles fuse with the cell membrane.
The body gets its energy when you respire. Respiration is an energy release inside a cell
The large intestinethe anus
Anything your body doesn't need and gets rid of
Large intestines
Osmosis is the process. CO2 is expelled through the cell wall.