Liquid wastes from the body exit through the urinary system by being excreted as urine. The kidneys filter waste from the blood, which then travels through the ureters to the bladder for storage. When the bladder is full, urine is expelled through the urethra.
The Exceretory System
excretory system
The digestive system removes solid wastes from the body through the process of defecation. The waste materials are formed in the large intestine and then eliminated from the body through the rectum and anus.
Embryos do not excrete nitrogenous wastes into the environment but rather rely on the mother's body to remove these wastes through the placenta. The mother's kidneys process the nitrogenous wastes from the embryo's blood and excrete them into her own bloodstream for elimination.
The removal of metabolic wastes from the body is called excretion. This process helps maintain the balance of the internal environment by eliminating waste products such as carbon dioxide, urea, and excess salts from the body.
Raw materials and harmful wastes enter and exit the cells in your body by blood, the red blood carry oxygen from lungs to the body cells.
The Excretory system gets rid of wastes.
They are called the "stool".
The excretory (urinary) system removes liquid wastes from the body
the bladder
Respiratory system
All wastes exit the body through the cloaca and the cloaca vent
Urinary system.
the process of removing liquids and wastes from the body is called, excretion. it is when the toxins in your blood, or another liquid, flow through the kidneys. the kidneys then filter the wastes, and or toxins, and produce your urine:)
Perspiration and urination
The body eliminates solid wastes through bowel movements, liquid wastes through urination, and gases through breathing. Solid wastes are formed in the colon, liquid wastes are filtered by the kidneys and eliminated as urine, and gases are exchanged in the lungs during respiration.
Urinary