Cloaca

Cloaca (kloh-AY-kah; from Latin, a sewer): the combined opening of the digestive, urinary, and reproductive systems of many vertebrates, including monotremes, birds, fish and reptiles; also in some invertebrates.

In birds
In birds, urine and feces from the digestive tube, and sperm and eggs from the reproductive organs, all pass out of the body through a common passage, the cloaca.

The cloaca is incompletely separated into three compartments: the copropodeum, into which the large intestines empties; the urodeum, into which the ureters and genital ducts empty; and the proctodeum, with which the coprodeum and urodeum communicate and which opens to the outside of the body through the vent, or anus, which is the external opening of the digestive tract.