Water can be lost through respiration when we exhale. As we breathe, water vapor is expelled from our lungs along with carbon dioxide. This process helps regulate our body temperature and balances the amount of water in our bodies.
Answer:transpiration or respiration
water
The byproducts of cellular respiration are water, ammonia and carbon dioxide. These are not used by the cell. Carbon dioxide is removed from the body through respiration. Ammonia and water are removed from the body through urine.
Water leaves the human body through various mechanisms such as urine, sweat, exhaled air, and feces. The kidneys filter excess water out of the bloodstream to form urine, which is then excreted from the body. Water is also lost through sweat during physical activity, and through exhaled air as a byproduct of respiration.
Water is lost from the body through urine (1-2 liters/day), sweat (variable amounts depending on activity and temperature), feces (about 100-200 ml/day), and respiration (about 400 ml/day). Overall, the average adult loses about 2.5-3 liters of water per day through these various means.
The other gas lost from the body is water vapor, which is exhaled through respiration. Water vapor is a natural byproduct of the body's metabolic processes and is released through the lungs as a component of exhaled air.
Answer:transpiration or respiration
Animals lose energy through metabolic processes, such as digestion and respiration. Energy is also lost through physical activity, such as movement and hunting for food. Energy can be lost as heat through thermoregulation to maintain body temperature.
water
Through respiration and perspiration.
The byproducts of cellular respiration are water, ammonia and carbon dioxide. These are not used by the cell. Carbon dioxide is removed from the body through respiration. Ammonia and water are removed from the body through urine.
Water leaves the human body through various mechanisms such as urine, sweat, exhaled air, and feces. The kidneys filter excess water out of the bloodstream to form urine, which is then excreted from the body. Water is also lost through sweat during physical activity, and through exhaled air as a byproduct of respiration.
It is transported out of the cell. The water is carried by blood vessels to the kidney, where the water is excreted in urine. (This process excretes MOST of the water, since part of the water produced from respiration is lost in sweat and breathing out)
Water is lost from the body through urine (1-2 liters/day), sweat (variable amounts depending on activity and temperature), feces (about 100-200 ml/day), and respiration (about 400 ml/day). Overall, the average adult loses about 2.5-3 liters of water per day through these various means.
Through respiration and urination.
Heat is lost by all things through convection, conduction and radiation.
Animals add water to the environment through respiration and breath droplets.