yes
Amylase, trypsin and lipase.
no stomach doesn't contain pancreatic juice. it is secreted by pancreas and contain trypsin and lipase which help in digesting proteins and fats respectively in small intestine
saliva and pancreatic juice
to increase the acidity of the chyme released by the stomach into the duodenum
Pancreatic juice in a frog travels from the pancreas through a duct that empties into the duodenum of the small intestine. When the frog eats, the presence of food in the duodenum triggers the release of pancreatic juice to aid in digestion.
The sodium bicarbonate found in pancreatic juice is produced in the lungs. The pulmonary transfer tubules allow transfer of the substance to the pancreas, where it can be used to neutralize the pH of the stomach in protein digestion.
No. Bile is synthesized in the liver, stored in the gallbladder and secreted into the intestinal tract at the same entry point as pancreatic juice - through a tube called the common bile duct - but the pancreas itself does not make or secrete bile.
Pancreatic juice performs its functions in the duodenum. It gets there by traveling through the pancreatic duct then enters the duodenum through the hepatopancreatic ampulla (ampulla of Vater).
Duodenum has an opening for the dumping of bile and pancreatic juice called the hepatopancreatic sphincter
Its the pancreas that makes the pancreatic juice.
pancreatic juice