Education logo

Human Excretory System:- All You Know About This In Detail.

Human Excretory System

By NEET RANGERSPublished 4 years ago 3 min read
Human Excretory System:- All You Know About This In Detail.
Photo by Robina Weermeijer on Unsplash

Excretory Products and Their Elimination

Animals accumulate ammonia, urea, uric acid, carbon dioxide, water, and ions like Na+, K +, Cl–, phosphate, sulfate, etc., either by metabolic activities or by other means like excess ingestion. These substances have to be removed totally or partially. Ammonia, urea, and uric acid are the major forms of nitrogenous waste excreted by animals.

In this chapter, you will learn the mechanisms of elimination of these substances with special emphasis on common nitrogenous wastes. Ammonia is the most toxic form and requires a large amount of water for its elimination, whereas uric acid, being the least toxic, can be removed with a minimum loss of water.

Homeostasis

Maintenance of steady-state (Walter Cannon). Homeostatic mechanisms are important for a normal life as they maintain conditions within a range in which, the animal's metabolic processes can occur.

Osmoregulation

The regulation of solute movement and hence water movement (which follows solutes by osmosis) is called osmoregulation. Maintenance of saltwater concentration in a steady state. Based on osmoregulation, animals are either osmoconformers or osmoregulatory.

Osmoconformers

These animals can not actively control the osmotic condition of their body fluids. Instead of this, they change or adapt the osmolarity of body fluids according to the osmolarity of the surrounding medium.

Example: All marine invertebrates and some freshwater invertebrates

Osmoregulator

These animals maintain an internal osmolarity different from the surrounding medium in which they inhabit. Osmoregulator animals must either eliminate excess water if they are in a hypotonic medium or they should continuously take in water to compensate for water loss if they are in a hypertonic medium.

Example: most vertebrates (except hagfish)

HUMAN EXCRETORY SYSTEM

License to NCERT

  1. A pair of kidneys
  2. A pair of ureters
  3. A urinary bladder
  4. And a urethra

Kidneys are mesodermal in origin. Mammalian kidneys are bean-shaped, reddish-brown colored with a tough fibrous connective tissue covering called renal capsules. Kidneys are located laterally on either side of vertebral column levels between the last thoracic and third lumbar vertebra close to the dorsal inner wall of the abdominal cavity. In humans, the right kidney is at a slightly lower level than the left kidney.

Post renal urinary tract

Urine passes from the pelvis into the ureter. Both the ureter open through separate oblique openings into the urinary bladder. The oblique openings prevent the backflow of urine. Externally, the bladder is lined by detrusor muscle, it is involuntary in nature while internally the bladder is lined by transitional epithelium or urothelium. This epithelium(transitional epi./urothelium) has a great capacity to expand so that a large volume of urine can be stored if required.

The opening of the urinary bladder is controlled by sphincters made of circular muscles. In humans two sphincters are present. Inner Internal sphincter (made up of involuntary muscle) Outer External sphincter (Voluntary muscle). These normally remain contracted and during micturition(voiding of urine) these relax to release urine.

During the act of micturition, urine leaves the urinary bladder and enters the membranous duct called Urethra.

THANK YOU FOR READING THIS

TagsExcretory organsHuman Excretory System diseaseHuman Excretory System parts HORMONEHuman Excretory System pdf

Posted by: A-Z NEET STUDY

Related Posts

Human Excretory System:- All You Know About This In Detail.

March 22, 2022

COMPENSATE HYPERTROPHY

If one kidney is removed from the body of a human being then the other one increases in size and tries to perform the function of the removed kidney also. It is an example of a regeneration method called compensate hypertrophy.

courses

About the Creator

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.