The contents of the Supraorbital gland page were merged into Salt gland on 26 October 2023. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page.
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects:
Salt gland is part of WikiProject Amphibians and Reptiles, an effort to make Wikipedia a standardized, informative, comprehensive and easy-to-use resource for amphibians and reptiles. If you would like to participate, you can choose to edit this article, or visit the project page for more information.Amphibians and ReptilesWikipedia:WikiProject Amphibians and ReptilesTemplate:WikiProject Amphibians and Reptilesamphibian and reptile
This article is part of WikiProject Animal anatomy, an attempt to organise a detailed guide to all topics related to animal anatomy apart from human anatomy. To participate, you can edit the attached article, or contribute further at WikiProject Animal anatomy. This project is an offshoot of WikiProject AnimalsAnimal anatomyWikipedia:WikiProject Animal anatomyTemplate:WikiProject Animal anatomyAnimal anatomy
Salt gland is part of the WikiProject Biology, an effort to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to biology on Wikipedia. Leave messages on the WikiProject talk page.BiologyWikipedia:WikiProject BiologyTemplate:WikiProject BiologyBiology
Compare the article from the time when I edited it, to the condition it is in now. IMHO it became a tech-speak article, instead of clearly indicating that this gland is of interest, how it works, and why it is needed.
Also well sourced information has been removed and replaced with un-sourced information. The article has been left in almost a Wikipedia:Stub form. I have a draft where I was going to elaborate and fill in information, including original drawings and well sourced material. This cannot happen now, since the article has been cut.
The salt gland is:
Of interest because it is similar in some ways to tears and sweat glands. In fact is exists as tear glands in many of the animals with salt glands.
Of interest because it has two counter-current mechanisms (exchange and multiplier) allowing it to work.
Of interest because of the importance of sea-water and salty fossil water desalination and the widespread search for bio-mimicry.
It works because of two sets of counter-current mechanisms: a counter-current exchange mechanism and a counter-current multiplier.
It is needed because of the lack of salt removing skin, because of too small a kidney in many animals with salt glands.