The left. It appears on the right on anatomical charts, because it is the consensus that in anatomy the body should be positioned facing front with the palms facing forward.
There are 4 lobes in a rat's liver. >.<
No, pigs are not poisonous to humans.
Fetal pigs are typically obtained from companies that specialize in supplying educational specimens for dissection in classroom settings. These companies work with facilities that process pigs for food consumption, and they obtain the fetal pigs as a byproduct of that process. The fetal pigs used for dissection are typically sourced from pigs that have been raised for food production.
Usually, yes. But the teats on a bore are for no purpose.
The urogenital papilla is part of the urogenital system, specifically in females where it forms the external opening of the urogenital sinus. It is located near the cloaca and plays a role in excretion and reproduction.
Since pigs and humans are so much alike, the pigs spleen is only half of a humans. This is so, because, humans are bigger than pigs, so it only makes sense that pigs' spleen is half the size of a human being's. :)
left
left ventricle, right ventricle, right atrium, left atrium
To claim that pigs are left-handed or right handed is a joke. It is said that all pigs are left-handed because of how you artificially inseminate a pig. A sow's, female pig, cervex twists counter-clockwise or to the left. This means that you have to twists the catheter tow the left in order to be able to penetrate the cervex to AI the pig. Whoever said that pigs are left-handed was having some fun with you.
The four chambers of a cow's heart are the same as a human's: left atrium, left ventricle, right atrium, right ventricle. In addition to the four main chambers, however, there are two accessory chambers that function as additions to the atrium. These are called the left and right auricles, and are outpouchings on the left and right atria respectively.
To produce, store, and eliminate blood cells.
The left ventricle would have more.
yes it indeed does, without a spleen a pig would be lifeless
Five organs that frogs and pigs have in common include the liver, heart, stomach, kidneys, and spleen. In addition, they both have a gall bladder.
The four chambers of a pig's heart have the same names as the analogous chambers in a human heart: right atrium, right ventricle, left atrium, left ventricle.The anatomy and physiology in pigs is very similar to a human's. Human biology studies often include a dissection of a fetal pig for lessons in anatomy. The pig's heart is one of the very similar organs to ours.The names of the four chambers in a pig's heart are the same as the four chambers in our hearts: The Right and Left Ventricles and the Right and Left Atria (plural for atrium).
By tradition, the left and the right of things is determined by the direction the thing usually goes. For example the left and right sides of a car. In mountaineering circles this is carried on to rivers where True Left (and True Right) are used to describe the banks of the river when facing downstream.
The fetal pig liver has five lobes: right lateral, right central, left central, left lateral, and caudate