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- Cloaca - Wikipedia
In the embryo, the embryonic cloaca divides into a posterior region that becomes part of the anus, and an anterior region that develops depending on sex: in males, it forms the penile urethra, while in females, it develops into the vestibule or urogenital sinus that receives the urethra and vagina [13][19] However, some placentals retain a
- Cloaca | Mammals, Birds, Reptiles | Britannica
Cloaca, (Latin: “sewer”), in vertebrates, common chamber and outlet into which the intestinal, urinary, and genital tracts open It is present in amphibians, reptiles, birds, elasmobranch fishes (such as sharks), and monotremes
- Cloaca: The Single Opening in Animals, Plus Human Implications
What does a cloaca look like? A cloaca is just an orifice that, on many animals, isn't visible until it's open In some animals, it's just a hole that looks a lot like an anus For other animals, like snakes, it's a small slit or vent
- Cloaca (Cloacal Anomaly) - Childrens Mercy
Cloaca is a birth defect in which a baby's rectum, vagina and urinary tract are fused together This common channel ends in a single opening on the baby’s bottom
- CLOACA Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
John Timmer, ArsTechnica, 17 Sep 2025 Everything comes out of one all-purpose hole called the cloaca in a chunky white paste that’s both poop and pee combined
- Cloacal Malformation (Persistent Cloaca): Symptoms, Diagnosis . . .
In developing fetuses, these openings are joined in a sac known as the cloaca Cloacal malformation, sometimes called persistent cloaca, is found in female children where the rectum, vagina and urethra are fused together, creating a single common channel
- What is the cloaca? - Vocab Dictionary
In these organisms, the cloaca serves as a common cavity where the intestinal, urinary, and reproductive tracts meet This means that both waste products and reproductive fluids exit the body through this single opening
- Cloaca | definition of cloaca by Medical dictionary
cloaca The combined urinary and faecal opening in the embryo before the two become separated The term derives from the Latin cloaca a sewer
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