urinary bladder
The Blader contracting and the Prostate relaxing to allow urine to flow
The urethra is a structure inside the body that expels urine from the bladder. Its function is to conduct the urine from the bladder for elimination.
Urine is expelled from the body through the urethra, a tube that connects the bladder to the outside. When the bladder fills with urine, nerve signals prompt the bladder muscles to contract, pushing urine into the urethra. This process is known as micturition or urination. The release of urine is controlled by both involuntary and voluntary muscle actions.
Urinating, which is contracting the urinary bladder.
In males, the urethra expels both urine and sperm. In females, the urethra expels only urine.
An African elephant's bladder can hold up to 18-26 gallons (70-100 liters) of liquid waste at a time. They have a large bladder capacity to allow them to hold urine for longer periods between bathroom breaks in their natural habitat.
It expels unused/excess vitamins and water we produce 1 -1.5 litters of urine per day the organs are the kidney ureters bladder and urethra
Detrusor muscle is found in the urinary bladder.
The bladder stores urine before it is urinated out of the body.
The bladder.
The urinary system primarily involves four main organs: the kidneys, ureters, bladder, and urethra. The kidneys filter blood to produce urine, which travels through the ureters to be stored in the bladder. The urethra then expels urine from the body. Together, these organs work to regulate fluid balance and eliminate waste.
They carry the urine to the bladder. The urethra takes urine from the bladder to the outside.