Wastes removed from the rectum are not considered excreted in the context of the body's metabolic processes because they consist primarily of undigested food residue and bacteria, rather than metabolic waste products. Excretion typically refers to the elimination of substances produced by the body's metabolism, such as urea and carbon dioxide. The rectal discharge is more a result of the digestive process rather than a byproduct of cellular metabolism. Thus, while it is a form of waste removal, it does not fit the definition of excretion in biological terms.
The rectum is part of the digestive system.
Rectum
rectum
No, passing gas does not include a form of excretion of body fluids.Since you are passing gas, you are not actually excreting any liquid.Thus, you are not excreting a bodily fluid, just a gas.
The rectum is found in the digestive system.
Excess and waste in humans are removed by processes in the urinary system, including the kidneys filtering waste from the blood to form urine, which is then expelled from the body through the urethra. The digestive system also plays a role in removing waste through the excretion of solid waste products via the anus.
yes.
The rectum is part of the digestive system. Both are part of the excretory system. The urethra is part of the urinary system.
1, This is used for collection of waste and excretion at a later time.
The rectum is the final part of the digestive tract, and is where faeces, the waste products of digestion, are stored until they are expelled from the body. All the waste will then leave by the anus.
The function of the rectum of a grasshopper is to take the waste products out of the digestive system.
The rectum is part of the excretory system. It is the end (along with the anus) of the digestive system.