Hello,
A snake excretes its waste the same way we do, and they do it through a vent on their under-belly. Believe me the odor from fresh snake poo is indeed, IMHO, quite atrocious and truly appalling stuff just like ours. I currently have six corn snakes that can attest to that fact.
Regards
how do reptiles eliminate waste
they eat lots and lots of food and then they eliminate it from their body by pooping and peeing it out
Sharks eliminate waste in much the same way as any fish. These animals have a surface that releases waste just like fish.
crayfish
Through their ass. Snakes have a single vent, called the cloaca, through which everything passes. This enables them to extract most of the water from their waste. The stool, typically, will include a small amount of urine, faeces, and a chalky or crystalline substance precipitated from the urine. i kind of dont get it
The same as any other animal, my friend ;)Out of the anus, and let it decompose/eaten by other organisms.crayfish
Yes, actually. Snakes have a digestive system like any other complex animal (just like people), and of course they have an opening to void waste. In snakes, the opening is called a "cloaca" instead of an "anus."
Sharks eliminate waste in much the same way as any fish. These animals have a surface that releases waste just like fish.
eliminate waste.
Every organism (living thing) needs the ability to eliminate waste products, so yes.
Every organism (living thing) needs the ability to eliminate waste products, so yes.
To eliminate can mean to banish, exile, or remove someone. But eliminate also means to get rid of waste.
of course!
crayfish
vertebrates
Grasshoppers eliminate their nitrogenous waste through the malipighian tubules that are on the digestive tract. Earthworms eliminate their nitrogenous waste by the nephridia.
The Contract with America was the Republican 104th Congress program to eliminate government waste.
Protists eliminate wastes by allowing them to diffuse through the cell membrane.
They eat our waste and secrete their own. Much bacterial waste makes plant nutrients.