User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
excreted- past of excrete
Extensive Definition
Excretion is the process of eliminating waste
products of metabolism and other
non-useful materials. It is an essential process in all forms of
life. It contrasts secretion, where the substance
may have specific tasks after leaving the cell.
In single-celled
organisms, waste products are discharged directly through the
surface of the cell.
Multicellular
organisms utilize more complex excretory methods. Higher
plants eliminate gases
through the stomata, or
pores, on the surface of leaves. Animals have special excretory
organs.
Human excretion
In humans, the two major excretory processes are the formation of urine in the kidneys and the formation of carbon dioxide (a human's abundant metabolic waste) molecules as a result of respiration, which is then exhaled from the lungs. These waste products are eliminated by urination and exhalation respectively. In urination, hormonal control over excretion occurs in the distal tubules of the kidneys as directed by the hypothalamus.In kidney
In humans the main organs of excretion are the kidneys and accessory urinary organs, through which urine is eliminated, and the large intestines, from which solid wastes are expelled. In strict biological terminology, the expulsion of feces is not considered to be excretion, since faeces is indigestible food, and not metabolic waste. The skin and lungs also have excretory functions: the skin eliminates water and salts in sweat, and the lungs expel water vapor and carbon dioxide.Other
- Mucociliary excretion is the excretion of mucus in the respiratory system.
Non-human
Plants have been shown (by British biologist Brian J. Ford) to translocate wastes into leaves which are then shed. In this fashion, the leaf, in addition to acting as an energy-trapping structure, is also a plant's organ of excretion.Aquatic
animals usually excrete ammonia directly into the
external environment, as this compound has high solubility and there is ample
water available for dilution. In terrestrial
animals ammonia-like compounds are converted into other
nitrogenous materials as there is less water in the environment and
ammonia itself is toxic.
Birds excrete their
nitrogenous wastes as uric acid in
the form of a paste. This is metabolically more expensive, but
allows more efficient water retention and it can be
stored more easily in the egg. Many
avian species, especially seabirds, can also excrete salt
via specialized nasal salt glands, the saline solution leaving
through nostrils in the beak.
Perspiration
is another excretory process which removes salts and water from the
body, although the primary purpose is cooling.
In insects, a system involving
Malpighian
tubules is utilized to excrete metabolic
waste. Metabolic waste diffuses or is actively transported into
the tubule, which transports the wastes to the intestines. The
metabolic waste is then released from the body along with fecal
matter.
Etymology
Many people misuse the term excretion as a euphemism for defecation, and use excrement for feces, but this is medically inexact.References
See also
External links
excreted in Min Nan: Pâi-siat
excreted in Czech: Vylučování
excreted in German: Exkretion
excreted in Spanish: Excreción
excreted in Galician: Excreción
excreted in Indonesian: Ekskresi
excreted in Icelandic: Þveiti
excreted in Italian: Escrezione
excreted in Pampanga: Excretion
excreted in Macedonian: Екскреција
excreted in Malay (macrolanguage):
Pengumuhan
excreted in Dutch: Excretie
excreted in Japanese: 排泄
excreted in Norwegian: Ekskresjon
excreted in Polish: Wydalanie
excreted in Portuguese: Excreção
excreted in Russian: Выделение
excreted in Slovak: Vylučovanie (zoológia)
excreted in Serbian: Систем за излучивање
excreted in Finnish: Erite
excreted in Swedish: Exkretion
excreted in Thai: การขับถ่าย
excreted in Ukrainian: Виділення
excreted in Chinese: 排泄作用