THE EXCRETORY SYSTEM
Regulation of Extracellular Fluids | Nitrogen Wastes | Water and Salt Balance
Excretory System Functions | Invertebrate Excretory Organs | Vertebrates Have Paired Kidneys
The Human Excretory System | Kidney Function | Hormone Control of Water and Salt
Disruption of Kidney Function | Links
Cells produce water and carbon dioxide as by-products of metabolic breakdown of sugars, fats, and proteins. Chemical groups such as nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorous must be stripped, from the large molecules to which they were formerly attached, as part of preparing them for energy conversion. The continuous production of metabolic wastes establishes a steep concentration gradient across the plasma membrane, causing wastes to diffuse out of cells and into the extracellular fluid.
Single-celled organisms have most of their wastes diffuse out into the
outside environment. Multicellular organisms, and animals in particular, must
have a specialized organ system to concentrate and remove wastes from the interstitial fluid into the blood capillaries and eventually deposit that
material at a collection point for removal entirely from the body.
Regulation of Extracellular Fluids
Excretory systems regulate the chemical
composition of body fluids by removing metabolic wastes and retaining the
proper amounts of water, salts, and nutrients. Components of this system in
vertebrates include the kidneys, liver, lungs, and skin.
Not all animals use the same routes or excrete their wastes the same way
humans do. Excretion applies to metabolic waste
products that cross a plasma membrane. Elimination is the removal of feces.
Nitrogen wastes are a by product of protein metabolism. Amino groups are removed
from amino acids prior to energy conversion. The
NH2 (amino group) combines with a hydrogen ion (proton) to form
ammonia (NH3).
Ammonia is very toxic and usually is excreted directly by marine
animals. Terrestrial animals usually need to conserve water. Ammonia is
converted to urea, a compound the body can tolerate at higher concentrations
than ammonia. Birds and insects secrete uric acid that they make through large
energy expenditure but little water loss. Amphibians and mammals secrete urea that they form in their liver. Amino
groups are turned into ammonia, which in turn is converted to urea, dumped into
the blood and concentrated by the kidneys.
The excretory system is responsible for regulating water balance in
various body fluids. Osmoregulation refers to the state aquatic
animals are in: they are surrounded by freshwater and must constantly deal with
the influx of water. Animals, such as crabs, have an internal salt
concentration very similar to that of the surrounding ocean. Such animals are known
as osmoconformers, as there is little water
transport between the inside of the animal and the isotonic outside environment.
Marine vertebrates, however, have internal concentrations of salt that
are about one-third of the surrounding seawater. They are said to be osmoregulators. Osmoregulators face two problems:
prevention of water loss from the body and prevention of salts diffusing into
the body. Fish deal with this by passing water out of their tissues through
their gills by osmosis and salt through their gills
by active transport. Cartilaginous fish have a
greater salt concentration than seawater, causing water to move into the shark
by osmosis; this water is used for excretion. Freshwater fish must prevent
water gain and salt loss. They do not drink water, and have their skin covered
by a thin mucus. Water enters and leaves through the gills and the fish
excretory system produces large amounts of dilute urine.
Terrestrial animals use a variety of methods to reduce water loss:
living in moist environments, developing impermeable body coverings, production
of more concentrated urine. Water loss can be considerable: a person in a 100
degree F temperature loses 1 liter of water per hour.
- Collect
water and filter body fluids.
- Remove
and concentrate waste products from body fluids and return other
substances to body fluids as necessary for homeostasis.
- Eliminate
excretory products from the body.
Many invertebrates such as flatworms use a nephridium as their excretory organ. At the
end of each blind tubule of the nephridium is a ciliated flame cell. As fluid passes down the tubule,
solutes are reabsorbed and returned to the body fluids.

Excretory system of a flatworm. Image from Purves et al., Life:
The Science of Biology, 4th Edition, by Sinauer Associates (www.sinauer.com)
and WH Freeman (www.whfreeman.com),
used with permission.

Excretory system of an earthworm. Image from Purves et al., Life:
The Science of Biology, 4th Edition, by Sinauer Associates (www.sinauer.com)
and WH Freeman (www.whfreeman.com),
used with permission.
Body fluids are drawn into the Malphigian tubules by osmosis due to large
concentrations of potassium inside the tubule. Body fluids pass back into the
body, nitrogenous wastes empty into the insect's gut. Water is reabsorbed and
waste is expelled from the insect.


Excretory system of an ant. Images from Purves et al., Life:
The Science of Biology, 4th Edition, by Sinauer Associates (www.sinauer.com)
and WH Freeman (www.whfreeman.com),
used with permission.
Vertebrates Have Paired Kidneys | Back to Top
ALL vertebrates have paired kidneys. Excretion is not the primary
function of kidneys. Kidneys regulate body fluid levels as a primary duty, and
remove wastes as a secondary one.
The Human Excretory System | Back to Top
The urinary system is made-up of the kidneys, ureters, bladder, and
urethra. The nephron, an evolutionary modification of the nephridium, is the
kidney's functional unit. Waste is filtered from the blood and collected as
urine in each kidney. Urine leaves the kidneys by ureters, and collects in the bladder. The bladder can distend to store urine
that eventually leaves through the urethra.







Human excretory system and the details of the kidney. Images from
Purves et al., Life: The Science of Biology, 4th Edition, by
Sinauer Associates (www.sinauer.com)
and WH Freeman (www.whfreeman.com),
used with permission.
The Nephron
The nephron consists of a cup-shaped capsule
containing capillaries and the glomerulus, and a long renal tube. Blood flows into the kidney through
the renal artery, which branches into capillaries associated with the
glomerulus. Arterial pressure causes water and solutes from the blood to filter
into the capsule. Fluid flows through the proximal tubule, which include the loop of Henle, and then into the distal tubule. The distal tubule empties into a
collecting duct. Fluids and solutes are returned to the capillaries that
surround the nephron tubule.

Filtration of the blood in the fine structure of the kidneys. Image
from Purves et al., Life: The Science of Biology, 4th Edition, by
Sinauer Associates (www.sinauer.com)
and WH Freeman (www.whfreeman.com),
used with permission.
The nephron has three functions:
- Glomerular
filtration of water and solutes from the blood.
- Tubular
reabsorption of water and conserved molecules back into the blood.
- Tubular
secretion of ions and other waste products from surrounding capillaries
into the distal tubule.
Nephrons filter 125 ml of body fluid per minute; filtering the entire
body fluid component 16 times each day. In a 24 hour period nephrons produce
180 liters of filtrate, of which 178.5 liters are reabsorbed. The remaining 1.5
liters forms urine.
Urine Production
- Filtration
in the glomerulus and nephron capsule.
- Reabsorption
in the proximal tubule.
- Tubular
secretion in the Loop of Henle.
Components of The Nephron
- Glomerulus:
mechanically filters blood
- Bowman's
Capsule: mechanically filters blood
- Proximal
Convoluted Tubule: Reabsorbs 75% of the water, salts, glucose, and amino
acids
- Loop
of Henle: Countercurrent exchange, which maintains the concentration
gradient
- Distal
Convoluted Tubule: Tubular secretion of H ions, potassium, and certain
drugs.
Kidney Stones
In some cases, excess wastes crystallize as kidney stones. They grow and can become a painful
irritant that may require surgery or ultrasound treatments. Some stones are
small enough to be forced into the urethra, others are the size of huge,
massive boulders (or so I am told).
Kidney Function | Back to Top
Kidneys perform a number of homeostatic functions:
- Maintain
volume of extracellular fluid
- Maintain
ionic balance in extracellular fluid
- Maintain
pH and osmotic concentration of the extracellular fluid.
- Excrete
toxic metabolic by-products such as urea, ammonia, and uric acid.
Hormone Control of Water and Salt | Back to Top
Water reabsorption is controlled by the antidiuretic hormone (ADH) in negative feedback. ADH is released from the pituitary gland in the brain. Dropping
levels of fluid in the blood signal the hypothalamus to cause the pituitary to
release ADH into the blood. ADH acts to increase water absorption in the
kidneys. This puts more water back in the blood, increasing the concentration
of the urine. When too much fluid is present in the blood, sensors in the heart
signal the hypothalamus to cause a reduction of the amounts of ADH in the
blood. This increases the amount of water absorbed by the kidneys, producing
large quantities of a more dilute urine.
Aldosterone, a hormone secreted by the kidneys,
regulates the transfer of sodium from the nephron to the blood. When sodium
levels in the blood fall, aldosterone is released into the blood, causing more
sodium to pass from the nephron to the blood. This causes water to flow into
the blood by osmosis. Renin is released into the blood to control
aldosterone.
Disruption of Kidney Function | Back to Top
Infection, environmental toxins such as mercury, and genetic disease can
have devastating results by causing disruption of kidney function. Many kidney
problems can be treated by dialysis, where a machine acts as a kidney. Kidney
transplants are an alternative to dialysis.
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