in nature do animals just let pee drip a little bit at a time over the course of the day or do they go from full to empty like we do?
>>2260300
Most mammals have bladders. Bladders are small to large sacs that contain a certain amount of urine and once the electricity is stretched too much the animal feels pressure and an urge to urinate. Once the animal starts urinating they generally urinate until the pressure has subsided to an almost empty level.
Pardon my Google voice, the word is *elasticity, not electricity.
>>2260302
but you know that feeling when you'd be able to pee but it's not urgent enough where you will go to the toilet.
also known as that moment when you're leaving the house and figure "might as well pee even though I don't need to go but it'll be a while since I reach a toilet" feeling.
would a wild animal just let it go as soon as he felt that possibility of urinating or would he wait until he "has to go"?
>>2260315
Depends.
Some need their urine to mark territories and of course it might just not be a good idea to urinate at that very moment. Animals in general don't have much "lazy time" where they could just urinate so I guess most will wait until it's convenient.
>>2260300
Depends on the animal. Most larger mammals empty their bladders like us. Some smaller rodents dribble all the time.
>>2260302
>once the electricity is stretched out too far
why are you shooting your animals with stun guns?