Biology 201 Dr. Edwin DeMont St. Francis Xavier University Respiration.

Post on 21-Jan-2016

215 views 0 download

transcript

Biology 201Dr. Edwin DeMont

St. Francis Xavier University

Respiration

St. Francis Xavier University

Gas Exchange

Animals must supply the oxygen required for aerobic respiration and a remove the carbon dioxide. The process of

gas exchange is called respiration.

Five main types of respiratory systems exist in animals:

1. Diffusion across plasma membranes (I)

2. Tracheae (I)

3. Cutaneous (body surface) exchange (I)

4. Gills (I,V) (I: Invertebrates)

5. Lungs (I,V) (V: Vertebrates)

St. Francis Xavier University

Diffusion (I)

Protozoa

Cnidarian

Flatworm

Diffusion across plasma membranes

Cutaneous (body surface) exchange

St. Francis Xavier University

Tracheal System (I)

Tracheae are an internal system of branching tubes that brings air directly to

each cell in the body.

Video

St. Francis Xavier University

Book Lung (I)

Tarantula

Book lungs are sheets of internal lamellae that are exposed to air on the outside and filled with blood on the inside.

St. Francis Xavier University

Gills (I)

BivalveGills are very efficient

in aquatic ecosystems—gills evolved from large or small skin projections with blood inside of the

projections.

St. Francis Xavier University

Gills (V)

Gills may be internal or external, but gas

exchange (oxygen in and carbon dioxide out) is very efficient due to countercurrent flow.

St. Francis Xavier University

Lungs: Birds

Lungs of birds are a flow-through system

wherein air is conducted through

the lungs in a single direction, and avian

lungs are particularly efficient (90% of oxygen in air is

removed).

St. Francis Xavier University

Lungs: Humans

The alveoli (structures with a large surface

area) are the site of gas exchange in the lungs of mammals and birds.

Video

St. Francis Xavier University

Gas Exchanges

Gases enter or leave the

circulatory system by diffusing down

concentration gradients.

Video

St. Francis Xavier University

Ventilation

Mammals utilize a negative pressure

system to bring air into lungs—they inhale by

suction

St. Francis Xavier University

LRC: Dogs

Motion of thoracic complex and ‘visceral piston’ shown by high

speed x-ray cinematographic images of a dog galloping on a

treadmill.

Locomotor respiratory coupling in mammals.

Bramble (1989). American Zoologist. 29 (1)

St. Francis Xavier University

LRC: Humans

Humans utilize LRC while running.

2:1 (Footfall:Breath)