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These are a cockroach's dissected mouthparts. Their mouth organs, the maxilla, mandibles,
and labium, are used to taste food and handle food pieces.
Cockroaches use their mandibles, or jaws, to bite and chew their food.
From the mouth organs, the food passes into the foregut, or esophagus.
The foregut opens into a crop, where undigested food is temporarily stored.
From the crop, the food enters the gizzard. The gizzard is a muscular stomach with sharp
teeth-like structures that grinds the food into smaller pieces.
The gastric sacks contain bacteria that the cockroach uses to digest its food.
The Malpighian tubules are the main organs of the cockroach's excretory system.
The Malpighian tubules remove wastes from the hemolymph, in the body cavity surrounding
the cockroach's organs and tissues. These organs also regulate the balance of
water and salts in the cockroach's body. The contents of the Malpighian tubules are
emptied into the midgut, which is also called the ileum.
Most of the absorption of the food's nutrients takes place in the midgut, or ileum.
In the hindgut, or colon, water, salts, and nutrients are reabsorbed from the feces and
urine. The remaining wastes leave the body through
the ***, which is also part of the excretory system.