Excretory System 11
Excretory System 11
Excretory System 11
EXCRETORY SYSTEM
Objective
filtration
1. → both useful substances
(𝑓𝑖𝑟𝑠𝑡 𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑔𝑒)
and wastes are removed
from the blood .
Reabsorption
2. → some of useful
𝑠𝑒𝑐𝑜𝑛𝑑 𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑔𝑒
substances reenter the
blood to be used by the
body .
Filtration
Filtration takes place in the glomeruli and
Bowman’s capsules.
The blood that enters a glomerulus is under
pressures.
The pressure forces the filtrate, which include
1.Water
2.Urea
3.Glucose
4.Amino acid
5.Various salts
through the thin walls of the glomerulus
into Bowman’s capsule.
- Blood cells and blood proteins, however, are
too large to pass through the walls of the
glomerulus.
- These substances remain in the blood.
- The filtrate that enters Bowman’s capsule is
like blood plasma, but it does not contain
proteins.
- If all of the filtrate that is formed were
excreted.
- The body would lose too much water along
with important nutrients and salts dissolved in
that water.
These substance plasma protein
Remain in capillary cells
platelets
glucose
water
These substance urea
Enters into amino acid
Bowman’s capsule various salts
Reabsorption
- After the filtrate has left Bowman’s capsule,
reabsorption occurs in the renal tubule.
- It is the process of reabsorption that reduce
the volume of filtrate and
- return various important substances to the
blood.
- Normally , as the filtrate passes through the renal
tubules of the nephrons,
- about 99 percent of the water,
- all of the glucose and amino acid and
- many of the salts are reabsorbed.
- These substances are reabsorbed in to the blood
by the capillaries that surround the tubules.
- The reabsorption of water from the renal
tubules is an important means of water
conservation in mammals.
- Glucose