visceral smooth muscle
Smooth muscles are usually found (1. in the walls of blood vessels; (2. around hollow organs such as the urinary bladder; (3. and in layers around the respiratory, Circulatory, Digestive, and Reproductive tracts.
The cloaca of the frog carries all waste and reproductive material from the frog. The rectum, urinary tract, and reproductive organs all flow into the cloaca and out of the body.
Everything except the urinary and digestive tracts.
Yes, a platypus can urinate. Like most mammals, they have a urinary system that allows them to excrete waste. However, they do not have a bladder; instead, urine is expelled directly from their kidneys through a cloaca, which is a common opening for the urinary, digestive, and reproductive tracts.
Smooth muscles are usually found (1. in the walls of blood vessels; (2. around hollow organs such as the urinary bladder; (3. and in layers around the respiratory, Circulatory, Digestive, and Reproductive tracts.
Female turtles have one single opening called a cloaca, which is used for excretion, reproduction, and laying eggs. This opening serves as the common opening for the digestive, urinary, and reproductive tracts in female turtles.
The order of the organs from the esophagus to the cloaca in the digestive system is as follows: esophagus, stomach, small intestine (duodenum, jejunum, ileum), large intestine (cecum, colon), and finally the cloaca. The cloaca serves as a common exit for the digestive, urinary, and reproductive tracts in certain animals.
Snakes lay eggs via a process called oviposition. The eggs develop and are then laid through the cloaca, which is an opening in the snake's body that serves as the endpoint for the digestive, reproductive, and urinary tracts.
In males, the urethra serves as a common passage for both urine and semen, which allows for direct contact between the urinary tract and reproductive tract. However, in females, the urinary and reproductive tracts do not come into direct contact as they are separate systems with different openings in the body.
Yes, eggs in birds come from the cloaca, which is an anatomical structure that serves as a common exit point for the digestive, urinary, and reproductive tracts. In female birds, the egg is formed in the ovary and then travels through the oviduct, where it is encased in layers of egg white and shell before being laid through the cloaca. Thus, the cloaca plays a crucial role in the reproduction process of birds.
No, they haven't.
Urologists focus on the urinary tracts of both males and females and the reproductive systems of males. Therefore conditions involving the kidneys, ureters, bladder, uretha and male reproductive organs are treated.