In male pigs, wastes and reproductive cells are transported outside the body through the penis.
The urethra in male pigs is the structure that transports both wastes (urine) and reproductive cells (sperm) to the outside of the body. It serves a dual function of carrying urine from the bladder and sperm from the testes through the reproductive system.
Excretory and reproductive, as both metabolic wastes and sperm/eggs exit there
booger
The osculum is an excretory structure in the living sponge, a large opening to the outside through which the current of water exits after passing through the spongocoel. Wastes diffuse into the water and the water exits through the osculum at a velocity of nearly 8.4 cm/second, carrying away with it the sponge's wastes. The size of the osculum is regulated by the myocyte. Its size, in turn, determines the amount of water flowing through the sponge.
Hemolymph (or Haemolymph) is the fluid equivalent to blood and serves a similar purpose. Unlike blood, there is no haemoglobin so it is not red. Instead, the oxygen-carrying molecule is haemocyanin.
The urethra in male pigs is the structure that transports both wastes (urine) and reproductive cells (sperm) to the outside of the body. It serves a dual function of carrying urine from the bladder and sperm from the testes through the reproductive system.
the urinary system
Urinary system
Urinary
it packages and transports wastes and other things outside the cell
The cardiovascular system transports nutrients and wastes.
The urinary system or renal system removes liquid and waste from the blood and transports them to the outside of the body. The kidneys remove waste, from the blood, which travels down the ureters into the bladder from where it passes through the urethra as urine.
The Circulatory System
Blood transports oxygen nutrients and wastes in mammals and fish .
The circulatory system transports materials in the body.
plasma- transports wastes and hormones
The circulatory system transports materials in the body.