Feces
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Feces (also called faeces or fæces) are the solid or semi-solid parts of food that our bodies cannot digest. They are made in the large intestine where special tiny living things called bacteria help break down the food. Feces contain a small amount of waste products and dead cells.
Feces leave our bodies through a part called the anus or, in some animals, through a structure called the cloaca, during a process known as defecation.
Feces are important for the environment. They can be used as fertilizer or soil conditioner to help plants grow. In some places, dried feces are burned for fuel or used in construction. Scientists have also found ways to use human feces for medicine. Together, urine and feces are called excreta.
Characteristics
Feces smell because of things like skatole, sulfur compounds, and other chemicals. Skatole is found in a substance in food called tryptophan.
Our bodies get rid of feces to stay healthy. This happens through a process called defecation, where the body uses muscles to push the feces out through the anus or cloaca.
Ecology
After an animal eats food, what is left over comes out as waste. This waste still has energy that can help small plants and animals.
Many tiny living things and insects, like dung beetles, eat this waste. Some animals also eat waste to get extra nutrients. For example, baby elephants sometimes eat their mothers' waste to help their tummies.
Waste can help plants grow. When animals eat fruit, they may pass seeds through their waste. This helps the seeds spread far away, giving them a better chance to grow.
Environmental impacts
Fecal resistome
The "fecal resistome" is the group of genes in waste from people and animals that can make germs stronger against medicines. When people and animals take medicines, these genes can end up in the environment through waste and water. This can happen when waste is used on farms or when it goes into water systems. These genes can then spread to other germs in the soil, making it harder to treat infections. Even without medicines, waste can change the soil and help strong germs grow more.
Human feces
Main article: Human feces
People get rid of solid or semi-solid waste from their bodies many times a day, or once every few days. When this waste becomes very hard and disrupts the normal routine for several days, it is called constipation.
The look of this waste changes based on what a person eats and their health. Usually, it is soft and has a layer of mucus. A mix of bile and bilirubin from dead red blood cells gives it its typical brown color.
Newborn babies first pass a special waste called meconium, which is different. After that, a baby’s waste is dark yellow-green because it contains only bile. Babies who are breast feeding have soft, pale yellow waste that doesn’t smell much. Once babies start eating other foods and their bodies begin to release bilirubin from dead red blood cells, their waste turns the familiar brown color.
As people grow, their waste can change color and texture. If waste moves quickly through the intestines, it may look greenish. If there is no bilirubin, the waste may look clay-like.
Fecal Microbiome and Disease
Feces show what’s living inside our gut, which helps keep us healthy. These tiny living things help break down food and support our body.
Scientists can study these tiny living things by looking at parts of their DNA from fecal samples. This helps them learn about our gut and can show if someone might have a health problem. The way feces look or feel can also give clues about health.
Uses of animal feces
See also: Reuse of excreta and Human feces § Uses
Animal waste, such as guano and manure, helps plants grow. It works like fertilizer to give soil nutrients.
Dry animal waste, like that from camel, bison, and cattle, can be burned for fuel. Some animals, like the giant panda and zebra, have special bacteria that help make energy.
Fossilized waste, called a coprolite, helps scientists learn about animals from long ago. Ancient waste found in caves can tell us about what people ate and their health by studying seeds and tiny bones inside. This waste stays preserved by nature.
Terminology
Feces is the scientific word for what comes out of our bodies when we go to the bathroom. Many people also call this stool, poo, or poop. Other words like shit and crap are used too, but they can be rude or offensive.
There are many different words to describe feces, especially for animals. For example, cow poop is often called cow dung, and bird droppings are just called droppings. In farming, animal waste is usually called manure. Different animals have special names for their waste, like scat for wild carnivores or guano for seabirds and bats.
Society and culture
Feelings of disgust
Main article: Human feces § Disgust and shame
In every culture, people feel different levels of icky feelings about feces. Young children, usually under two years old, don’t feel this way, which shows it’s learned through culture. The feeling of ick is strongest in places where flush toilets keep smells away.
Social media
There is a Pile of Poo emoji in Unicode called unchi or unchi-kun in Japan.
Jokes
Poop is a big part of toilet humor and is something that young children and teenagers often find funny.
Images
Related articles
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