There are several systems in the body that get rid of cellular waste.
1. The urinary system removes urea from the body.
2. The spleen removes aged and damaged blood cells from the blood stream and breaks them down. The liver then removes the hemaglobin and breaks it down further. Some of the by products are excreted with the bile (ie heme) and some are released back to the blood stream to be removed by the kidneys (urea).
3. Some cellular waste is transported by the blood to the lungs where it is released through exhalation. (ie carbon dioxide)
<span>4. Some cellular waste is removed from the body through perspiration.
</span>Lysosomes have powerful enzymes and acids to digest and recycle cell<span> materials. Proteins aren't the only type of </span>cellular waste<span>. </span>Cells<span> also have to recycle compartments called organelles when they become old and worn out. For this task, they rely on an organelle called the lysosome, which works like a </span>cellular<span>stomach.</span>
D is the correct answer to this question
False. Paraphrasing is expressing the meaning of something using different words
<span>The answer to this question would be: Gastric juices mix with food to partially digest it.
Stomach or gaster will produce gastric juice which has an enzyme to digest protein and also lower the pH into acid. This way the gaster can kill bacteria that digested with the food to protect the intestine and helping digesting a part of the food(mainly protein). The food will be kept in the stomach for 2 hours so it's not quickly moved to the small intestine.
Other digestion will be done by the pancreas which can digest fat, carbohydrate, and protein in the small intestine.</span>