Skip to main content

What organ eliminates waste and helps maintain water and salt balance in fish?

Wastes can pass out of the body of a fish via its gills. However, fish also have kidneys to filter the circulating blood and to remove the toxic waste ammonia. Kidneys help to control water balance inside their body.


In fresh water fish, there is a danger of inward osmosis because of the greater concentration of fresh water outside their body relative to inside. Gills in this case will take in salt and water will...

Wastes can pass out of the body of a fish via its gills. However, fish also have kidneys to filter the circulating blood and to remove the toxic waste ammonia. Kidneys help to control water balance inside their body.


In fresh water fish, there is a danger of inward osmosis because of the greater concentration of fresh water outside their body relative to inside. Gills in this case will take in salt and water will enter the body. They will excrete urine which will be dilute and this will remove excess water that might otherwise cause their cells to swell and possibly burst due to the environment they live in. This is known as being in a hyptonic solution.


In salt water fish, they have the opposite situation---there will be a greater quantity of fresh water inside the cells relative to the salty environment. Therefore, outward osmosis is a possible problem and their cells could shrink as they lose water by plasmolysis. They could also gain salt but in this case their gills help to excrete the salt from the environment. This helps to regulate their water balance. This is an example of what occurs in a hypertonic solution.


By having adaptations like gills and kidneys, fish can survive in different habitats.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Can you analyze the poem "Absolution" by Siegfried Sassoon?

Sure! Siegfried Sassoon fought in World War I and was wounded in battle; he spent much of his life speaking out against war, and these pacifist feelings are easy to see in his poems. This one, "Absolution," was published in 1917, the same year that Sassoon was hospitalized for what we know today as post-traumatic stress disorder. "Absolution" is a short poem that contains three stanzas of four lines each. The word "absolution" means "forgiveness," and... Sure! Siegfried Sassoon fought in World War I and was wounded in battle; he spent much of his life speaking out against war, and these pacifist feelings are easy to see in his poems. This one, "Absolution," was published in 1917, the same year that Sassoon was hospitalized for what we know today as post-traumatic stress disorder. "Absolution" is a short poem that contains three stanzas of four lines each. The word "absolution" means "forgiveness," and the v...

How and why does James Gatz become Jay Gatsby? Describe the young Gatsby/Gatz.

James Gatz, a poor Midwestern boy of probable Jewish lineage, becomes Jay Gatsby, a presumed WASP and wealthy socialite, when he moves to New York City and acquires his fortune. It is wealth that has allowed Gatz to transform himself into Gatsby. However, those who know his background (e.g., Daisy and Tom Buchanan) never allow him to forget that he is nouveau riche -- that is, an upstart who has just recently made his fortune,... James Gatz, a poor Midwestern boy of probable Jewish lineage, becomes Jay Gatsby, a presumed WASP and wealthy socialite, when he moves to New York City and acquires his fortune. It is wealth that has allowed Gatz to transform himself into Gatsby. However, those who know his background (e.g., Daisy and Tom Buchanan) never allow him to forget that he is nouveau riche -- that is, an upstart who has just recently made his fortune, whereas they arose from well-to-do families. Gatz became Gatsby through determination and discipline. At the end of the novel, the narr...

In chapter one of The Great Gatsby, what advice does Nick's father give him? How does this make him a good person to tell this story?

Nick says that his father advised him that, before "criticizing anyone," he "remember that all the people in this world haven't had the same advantages" as Nick.  As a result, Nick claims that he is "inclined to reserve all judgments," presenting himself to the reader as a fair and dispassionate arbiter of character, and thus, a reliable narrator.   The problem is that Nick immediately reveals himself as anything but reliable, as he then launches... Nick says that his father advised him that, before "criticizing anyone," he "remember that all the people in this world haven't had the same advantages" as Nick.  As a result, Nick claims that he is "inclined to reserve all judgments," presenting himself to the reader as a fair and dispassionate arbiter of character, and thus, a reliable narrator.   The problem is that Nick immediately reveals himself as anything but reliable, as he then launches into a discussion of how pe...