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  2. Renal portal system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renal_portal_system

    Renal portal system. A renal portal system is a portal venous system found in reptiles, and fish excluding hagfish and lampreys. It is not found in mammals. [1] Its function is to supply blood to renal tubules when glomerular filtration is absent or downregulated. [2]

  3. Mesonephros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesonephros

    Mesonephros. Reconstruction of a human embryo of 17 mm. (Label for Mesonephros is at center right.) The mesonephros ( Greek: middle kidney) is one of three excretory organs that develop in vertebrates. It serves as the main excretory organ of aquatic vertebrates and as a temporary kidney in reptiles, birds, and mammals.

  4. Portal venous system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal_venous_system

    In the circulatory system of vertebrates, a portal venous system occurs when a capillary bed pools into another capillary bed through veins, without first going through the heart. Both capillary beds and the blood vessels that connect them are considered part of the portal venous system. Most capillary beds drain into venules and veins which ...

  5. Hepatic portal system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hepatic_portal_system

    Details. Location. Abdomen. Anatomical terminology. [ edit on Wikidata] In human anatomy, the hepatic portal system or portal venous system is the system of veins comprising the portal vein and its tributaries. The other portal venous systems in the body are the renal portal system, and the hypophyseal portal system. [1]

  6. Pronephros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pronephros

    Pronephros is the most basic of the three excretory organs that develop in vertebrates, corresponding to the first stage of kidney development. It is succeeded by the mesonephros, which in fish and amphibians remains as the adult kidney. In amniotes, the mesonephros is the embryonic kidney and a more complex metanephros acts as the adult kidney ...

  7. Kidney (vertebrates) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kidney_(vertebrates)

    Kidney (vertebrates) The kidneys are a pair of organs of the excretory system in vertebrates, which maintain the balance of water and electrolytes in the body ( osmoregulation ), filter the blood, remove metabolic waste products, and, in many vertebrates, also produce hormones (in particular, renin) and maintain blood pressure.

  8. Hypophyseal portal system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypophyseal_portal_system

    The hypophyseal portal system is a system of blood vessels in the microcirculation at the base of the brain, connecting the hypothalamus with the anterior pituitary. Its main function is to quickly transport and exchange hormones between the hypothalamus arcuate nucleus and anterior pituitary gland. The capillaries in the portal system are ...

  9. Frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog

    Frogs produce large quantities of dilute urine in order to flush out toxic products from the kidney tubules. The nitrogen is excreted as ammonia by tadpoles and aquatic frogs but mainly as urea, a less toxic product, by most terrestrial adults. A few species of tree frog with little access to water excrete the even less toxic uric acid.