Jump to content

Excretory system

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 82.134.121.18 (talk) at 19:22, 7 May 2008 (rv). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Excretory System is the system of an organism's body that performs...Insert non-formatted text herehe function of excretion, the bodily process of discharging wastes. It is responsible for the elimination of wastes produced by the processes that maintain homeostasis. There are several parts of the body that are responsible for this process, such as the sweat glands, the liver, the lungs, and the kidney system.

Outline of the excretory system

I was here--68.60.116.115 (talk) 22:15, 6 May 2008 (UTC)

Lungs

Lungs are two organs localized on each side of the thorax. They are constituted by pulmonary alveoli. They are not responsible for converting oxygen into carbon dioxide, but to maintain life supporting levels of these two gases in blood stream by excreting the extra carbon dioxide and keeping a regular supply of oxygen. Each and all organism's cells can take the oxygen through passive diffusion from the bloodstream and use it in its own metabolism, thus producing carbon dioxide that will be further excreted when passing through alveoli circulation.

Skin

The skin is another part of the system, containing sweat that help regulate the concentration in one’s body while also keeping him or her cool. The salt helps evaporate the water, cooling off the skin. Sweat is excreted through sweat glands. There are two types of sweat glands: eccrine sweat glands and apocrine sweat glands. The basic purpose of skin is to provide a waterproof, protective, covering for the body's complex internal environment. The skin also plays a key rules in helping to maintain the circulatory and nervous system.

Eccrine Sweat Glands

The eccrine sweat glands secrete mostly water and salt and are used by the body for temperature control. These glands are located all around the body but are most profuse around the soles of the feet, palms of the hands, and the forehead.

Liver

The liver is a vital part of the excretory system, and the human body. It regulates glycogen storage, plasma protein synthesis, and drug detoxification. The liver secretes bile, a base used for breaking down fats. Therefore, it helps get rid of unneeded wastes in the body. It changes toxic ammonia, which is a poisonous gas, to urea, a harmless fluid. The kidney filters urea (a mix of sugar and waste) into a liquid called urine. The liver is the largest gland in the body.

Kidney

The most important organs of the excretory system are the kidneys. The kidneys are placed on either side of the spinal column near the lower back. The kidneys are bean-shaped and they have an important job. They are responsible for removing wastes from the blood and they also keep your blood pressure in check and help with the making of red blood cells. When your body gets ready to pass waste products, it goes through the kidneys and mixes with water and urine. Then, the waste travels into the bladder through tubes. These tubes are called Ureters. Now, the bladder holds all of that urine until it feels so full that you need to get rid of it. That's called urination. When this happens, a tube called the Urethra takes the urine to the outside of the body.

Bile

Bile is a substance secreted by the liver and used for breaking down fats, ethanol, and acidic wastes. It is composed of water, cholesterol, lecithin, bicarbonate ions, bile salts, and pigments. Bile is a strong basic substance, classified as alkaline. It is released through bile ducts in the liver. Bile is a digestive chemical that is produce in the liver, stored in the gall bladder,and secreted in the small intestine. The kidney's main roles are to control the blood PH, filter all kind of wastes and remove urea from the blood and produced in to urine.

Bile is capable of breaking down fats that is the strongness of the chemicals and acid in bile

The process by which animals rid themselves of waste products and of the nitrogenous by-products of metabolism. Through excretion organisms control osmotic pressure—the balance between inorganic ions and water—and maintain acid-base balance. The process thus promotes homeostasis, the constancy of the organism's internal environment.

Every organism, from the smallest protist to the largest mammal, must rid itself of the potentially harmful by-products of its own vital activities. This process in living things is called elimination, which may be considered to encompass all of the various mechanisms and processes by which life forms dispose of or throw off waste products, toxic substances, and dead portions of the organism. The nature of the process and of the specialized structures developed for waste disposal vary greatly with the size and complexity of the organism.

Four terms are commonly associated with waste-disposal processes and are often used interchangeably, though not always correctly: excretion, secretion, egestion, and elimination.

Excretion is a general term referring to the separation and throwing off of waste materials or toxic substances from the cells and tissues of a plant or animal.

The separation, elaboration, and elimination of certain products arising from cellular functions in multicellular organisms is called secretion. Though these substances may be a waste product of the cell producing them, they are frequently useful to other cells of the organism. Examples of secretions are the digestive enzymes produced by intestinal and pancreatic tissue cells of vertebrate animals, the hormones synthesized by specialized glandular cells of plants and animals, and sweat secreted by glandular cells in the skins of some mammals. Secretion implies that the chemical compounds being secreted were synthesized by specialized cells and that they are of functional value to the organism. The disposal of common waste products should not, therefore, be considered to be of a secretory nature.

Egestion is the act of excreting unusable or undigested material from a cell, as in the case of single-celled organisms, or from the digestive tract of multicellular animals.

As defined above, elimination broadly defines the mechanisms of waste disposal by living systems at all levels of complexity. The term may be used interchangeably with excretion.