Component 3: Gas Exchange Flashcards
What is the total oxygen requirement proportional to?
the volume of the organism
What is the rate of absorption of oxygen proportional to?
the organisms surface area
What are the common features of gas exchange surfaces?
- large surface area relative to volume
- permeable
- thin
- moist
- mechanism to maintain diffusion gradients
What are the 3 main factors that affect the need for a specialised transport system?
- Volume -> an increase in the layers of cells means that less oxygen can diffuse into the organism (can only occur across 2 cells w/o specialised carriers) as it would be used up by outer cells first
- Level of Activity -> animals require the energy released by food in respiration to enable them to move around, if the animals is active or needs to keep warm the animal requires larger volumes of oxygen and nutrients to supply energy
- Surface area to volume ratio
Describe gas exchange generally for small organisms
- don’t need a transport system
- their cells are surrounded by the environment they live in
- can rely on diffusion to supply the substances required
Describe gas exchange in amoeba
- a single-celled organism that has a very large SA:V (pseudopodia) so that simple diffusion through cell membrane is fast enough to meet oxygen demands (short diffusion pathway)
- lives in fresh water ponds
- removes CO2 fast so cytoplasm doesn’t become acidic and enzymes can’t function
Describe gas exchange in flatworms
a multicellular organism with a smaller surface area to volume ration but are flattened to reduce diffusion distance and so they can rely on their external surface for gas exchange
Describe gas exchange in earthworms
- a multi-cellular organism
- smaller SA:V as it’s cylindrical but it’s elongated
- diffusion happens across the moist skin but has a closed circulation with haemoglobin to carry oxygen to tissues and each cell
- haemoglobin and circulation maintain a steep concentration gradient
- since the ski has to stay moist it restricts the environment to damp soil
Why do terrestrial organisms have gas exchange organs inside the body?
to reduce water and heat loss
Describe the gas exchange in amphibians (e.g. frogs)
- both terrestrial and aquatic
- gas exchange takes place across the skin (at rest) and lungs (when active)
- the skin is moist, permeable and has a well developed capillary network
- undergoes metamorphosis when going from the larval form to the adult form
Describe the gas exchange in reptiles
- gas exchange takes place across the lungs with in-growths of tissue to increase SA
- movement of the ribs aid in the ventilation of the lungs
Describe the gas exchange in birds
- gas exchange takes place in the lungs with air sacs
- air sacs act as bellows, when the bird breathes in any air that remains in the lungs from the last breath gets sucked into air sacs = lungs always filed with fresh air
- no diaphragm but ribs and flight muscles ventilate lungs
Describe the gills as the special respiratory surface in fish
- one-way current of water kept flowing by ventilation mechanisms which maintains concentration gradient
- large surface area provided by the gill filaments (density of water flowing through prevents gills from collapsing)
- extensive network of blood capillaries to allow efficient diffusion and haemoglobin for oxygen carriage
- thin layer of cells separate blood from outside water
Describe the gas exchange organ in bony fish?
- called gills
- fish possess several gills located between their buccal cavity (mouth cavity) and a chamber at the sides of their mouth called the opercular cavity
Compare bony fish to cartilaginous fish
Bony:
- skeleton made of bones
- lives in sea or fresh water
- covered in scales (= no exchange through surface)
- gills inside opercular cavity
- gas exchange involves a counter-current system
Cartilaginous:
- skeleton made of cartilage
- mostly live in the sea
- covered in scales
- contain gill clefts
- gas exchange involves a parallel system where the water and blood travel in the same direction
Draw a labelled diagram of a gill (bony fish)
Gill Arch: bony structure to support gill filaments and rakers
Gill Rakers: filter water and trap prey
Gill Filament (gas exchange surface): provides a large SA, filled with blood and short diffusion path (gill plates)
Why is water harder to respire in than air?
- contains a low concentration of oxygen (1/30th of the concentration in air)
- denser and more viscous than air making it harder to move in
What is the ventilation mechanism for taking in water?
- mouth opens
- operculum cavity closes
- floor of the mouth is lowered
- volume inside the mouth cavity increases
- pressure inside the mouth cavity decreases
- water flows in as the external pressure is higher than the pressure inside the mouth
What is the ventilation mechanism to force water out?
- mouth closes
- operculum opens
- floor of the mouth is raised
- volume inside the mouth cavity decreases
- pressure inside the mouth cavity increases
- water flows out over the gills because the pressure in the mouth cavity is higher than in the opercular cavity
What is meant by a counter current flow?
blood and water flow in opposite directions at the gill lamellae, maintaining the concentration gradient across the entire length
Why is counter current flow more efficient?
Concentration gradient maintained over entire distance of gill lamellae (diffusion occurs across entire length)
What is meant by parallel flow?
blood and water flow in the same direction at the gill lamellae, maintaining the concentration gradient for oxygen to diffuse into the blood only up to the point where its concentration in the blood and water is equal (50% max and not maintained across entire length)
Define the term ‘breathing’
the passage of air into and out of the lungs to supply the blood with oxygen
Define the term ‘ventilation’
movement of diaphragm and rib cage that brings air into and out of the lungs
Define the term ‘respiration’
the metabolic process by which an organism obtains energy by reacting O2 with glucose to give H2O, CO2 and ATP
What is the function of the human breathing system?
to supply respiring tissues with oxygen
reduce heat and water loss
Name and draw a diagram of the lungs
- tongue
- epiglotis
- oesophagus
- trachea
- cartilage rings
- ribs
- intercostal muscles
- bronchi
- bronchioles
- pleural membranes
- pleural space
- diaphragm
Why are the cartilage rings not complete?
allows the oesophagus behind it to bulge as food is being swallowed
Name the parts of the trachea section
- larynx
- trachea
- rings of cartilage
- bronchi
- bronchioles
Draw and label the cross section of a bronchiole
- smooth muscle
- ciliated epithelium
- loose tissue with elastic fibres
- goblet cell
- blood vessel
Draw and label the cross section of the trachea
- cartilage
- smooth muscle and elastic fibres
- ciliated epithelium with goblet cells
- small blood vessel
- mucus secreting gland
What is the function of the goblet cells and positions in the gas exchange system?
- secrete a sticky mucus which traps tiny particles in the air (e.g. pollen and bacteria)
- this reduces the chance of infection as they are removed from the lungs
- found in the trachea, bronchi and large bronchioles