Difference between revisions of "Snake Urinary System"
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(New page: {{unfinished}} The urinary system of snakes consists of paired lobulated kidneys and ureters that empty into the dorsal urodeum. *'''Kidney''' - Paired kidneys are located in the dorsal ...) |
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*'''Ureters and cloaca''' - Snakes have no bladder. The ureter enters the urodeum at a urogenital papilla and urine refluxes into the colon for fluid conservation. | *'''Ureters and cloaca''' - Snakes have no bladder. The ureter enters the urodeum at a urogenital papilla and urine refluxes into the colon for fluid conservation. | ||
+ | [[Category:Snake_Anatomy]] |
Revision as of 17:39, 22 April 2010
This article is still under construction. |
The urinary system of snakes consists of paired lobulated kidneys and ureters that empty into the dorsal urodeum.
- Kidney - Paired kidneys are located in the dorsal caudal coelomic cavity with the right kidney cranial to the left. They are elongated, lobulated and somewhat triangular in cross section. All reptiles have metanephric kidneys that are simpler than the mammalian counterpart. There are decreased number of glomeruli (some species are aglomerular) and there is no loop of Henle. They may have one or more renal arteries, and in some species, there is a separate branch of the ureter draining each lobule. There may be a sexual segment in the caudal kidney that follows up the distal part of each tubule and empties into a collecting duct.
- Ureters and cloaca - Snakes have no bladder. The ureter enters the urodeum at a urogenital papilla and urine refluxes into the colon for fluid conservation.