No. The skin does.
Lungs can not and does not excrete salts from its surface.
The skin,is the organ that uses sweat to excrete water,salts,and a small amount of urea
Carbon dioxide and water vapor
Dissolving inorganic salts in water the surface tension is increased.
Freshwater protozoans excrete ammonia and mineral salts through the process of diffusion across their cell membrane. This allows waste products to pass out of the cell and maintain proper internal balance.
The openings in the skin for the discharge of water, salts, and urea are called sweat pores; these are the openings of sweat organs which delivery sweat containing these substances when the body needs to chill off
The salt glands excrete excess salts and water from the body. The urinary tract is also used for this purpose through the kidney.
Humans and most other air-breathing animals require a constant source of fresh drinking water to excrete accumulated salts and metabolic waste products.
The sweat glands excrete excess salts and water through the process of sweating. This helps regulate body temperature and maintain homeostasis.
The skin can excrete water and salts by sweating. This process also lowers the body's temperature.
for a more medical answer, your body excretes waste in many ways. * when you exhale, you excrete carbon dioxide * you excrete feces during a bowel movement * you excrete urea in your urine when you urinate * you excrete waste when you sweat I may be missing a few, however, I feel that this is more accurate than poo and wizz
Yes, the addition of salts to water typically increases the surface tension of water. This is because the salts disrupt the hydrogen bonding within water molecules, leading to stronger water-water interactions at the surface, which increases surface tension.