What is excretion? How do animals remove waste products of their body?
Excretion is the elimination of metabolic waste products from the animal body to regulate the composition of the body fluids and tissues. The terms excretion and defecation should not be confused. Defecation is the removal of wastes and undigested food, collectively called feces, through the anus. The object of excretion is to remove the unwanted, harmful metabolic waste products from the body in order to maintain the equilibrium of the body. If these products are allowed to accumulate instead of their removal from the body, the equilibrium of the body will be disturbed by their mass-action effect, therefore, their removal is very necessary and they must be removed from the body by any son of the method.
In the animal bodies, the following structures are concerned in the excretion of harmful metabolic waste products:
(i) The lungs and gills are the paths for excretion of gaseous wastes,
(ii) The kidneys or some homologous nephritic organs are the paths for excretion of urea, uric acid, ammonia, and other nitrogenous compounds which are usually removed in the form of urine,
(iii) The skill also serves as an excretory organ in certain animals and is a path for excretion of some gaseous wastes and inorganic ions,
(iv) The liver also affects some excretion, chiefly of cholesterol and bile-pigments,
(v) The intestinal epithelium of certain animals also functions as an excretory organ because it excretes certain inorganic constituents which are present in excess in the body,
(vi) The salivary, mammary, and tear glands up to some extent also serve as vehicles of excretion of traces of wastes and may excrete a significant amount of foreign substances.
Figure : Kidneys