The nephridium (: nephridia) is an invertebrate organ, found in pairs and performing a function similar to the vertebrate kidneys (which originated from the chordate nephridia). Nephridia remove metabolic wastes from an animal's body and come in two basic categories: metanephridia and protonephridia. In some cases, nephridia may fuse or become functionally integrated with coelomoducts—mesodermal structures that open from the coelom to the exterior—to form a more complex structure known as a nephromixium. All animals possessing nephridia or kidneys belong to the clade Nephrozoa.
The nephridium (: nephridia) is an invertebrate organ, found in pairs and performing a function similar to the vertebrate kidneys (which originated from the chordate nephridia). Nephridia remove metabolic wastes from an animal's body and come in two basic categories: metanephridia and protonephridia. In some cases, nephridia may fuse or become functionally integrated with coelomoducts—mesodermal structures that open from the coelom to the exterior—to form a more complex structure known as a nephromixium. All animals possessing nephridia or kidneys belong to the clade Nephrozoa.
==Metanephridia== thumb|Earthworm nephrostome (10) and metanephridium (9). thumb|Earthworm metanephridium A metanephridium (meta = "after") is a type of excretory gland found in many types of invertebrates such as annelids, arthropods and mollusca. (In mollusca, it is known as the Bojanus organ.)
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).