The Skin controls the activity of the eccrine sweat glands.
The nervous system controls muscles and glands by electrical impulses.
The autonomic nervous system controls both sensation and glandular activity. Sensory information is carried to the central nervous system via sensory nerves, while motor nerves regulate glandular activity, such as the secretion of hormones from glands.
These are the sweat glands, technically known as exocrine glands. That is very wrong!! Exocrine secrete hormones. The correct answer is sweat glands which is technically known as "sudoriferous glands".
Eccrine and apocrine sweat glands are both referred to as sudoriferous glands. The eccrine glands are found all over the body and function throughout your life. Apocrine glands develop during puberty and are most active throughout adulthood and are located in the armpits, areolar, genital, and anal areas. They are also the ones responsible for what we refer to as body odor. It is not the sweat that actually has to odor, but the bacteria that it attracts excretes its wastes as it digests the sweat. It is the bacteria's waste products that actually have the odor. So, you could say, you do not have body odor. Instead, you have bacteria odor.
The Endocrine system.
By your nervous system
The endocrine system controls the body using hormones. These chemical messengers are produced by glands like the pituitary, thyroid, and adrenal glands, and they travel through the bloodstream to regulate various bodily functions such as metabolism, growth, and reproduction.
Pituitary gland in your brain and the endocrine system.
No, voluntary responses do not control the activity of glands because gland activity is mainly regulated by the autonomic nervous system, which works involuntarily. Glands respond to various stimuli such as hormones, nervous signals, and environmental factors to produce and secrete their specific substances.
the part of the nervous system of vertebrates that controls involuntary actions of the smooth muscles and heart and glands
The endocrine system, which includes the pituitary gland, the subaceous glands, the thyroid gland, the suprarenal glands, the pancreas, and the gonads. The endocrine system controls many structural and functional changes during development and adjusts metabolic activity and energy use by the body.