Digestive juices is produced in the stomach and small intestine. The mouth does not produce digestive juices, it is only saliva. The food will stay in the stomach for 2-5 hours and digestive juices are added to make it softer and then, the food travels to the small intestine where more digestive juices are added.
Mainly lysosomes do digestion.They have many digestive enzymes.
Gastric acid.
They are digestive juices, and are needed to build up the digestive systemTo make proteins (to build a body).
The mixture of food and digestive juices that leave the stomach is called chyme. Chyme is a semi-fluid mass consisting of partially digested food, gastric juices, and enzymes that is passed from the stomach to the small intestine for further digestion and absorption of nutrients.
Chyme is the liquid-like mixture that results from digestive activities in the stomach. It is a combination of partially digested food, water, and digestive juices.
bile
They are produced in the stomach by the cells lining it.
The first digestive juices are those produced in saliva that is excreted into the mouth.
"Produce digestive juices" Digestive juices are produced by your body in your mouth (saliva) stomach (acids) and in many other places down your digestive system, they help break down the food we eat and the other things we drink or take (eg:drugs/medication). If there were no digestive juices our body would not be able to use our food for our advantage
Blood vessels do not carry digestive juices to the digestive system. Digestive juices are either secreted directly into the lumen of the digestive tract, or are carried by ducts, as with bile and pancreatic juice.
Yes. That is your body's way of getting rid of digestive juices.
The digestive system creates alot of juices. like Gastric juices, digestive juices in the schmach such as hydrochloric acid. Also Insulin, Enzymes, Saliva, and Bile.
help the digestive system
The gallbladder and pancreas add digestive juices for the breakdown of fat.
The pancreas of both the frog and the human produces a variety of digestive enzymes as well as hormones. However, the insulin produced by the frog is noticeably dissimilar from that produced by humans, so you can't use frog insulin for humans.
stomach
no