Respiratory System: Lecture Six Assit - Lect.Maha Mustafa
Respiratory System: Lecture Six Assit - Lect.Maha Mustafa
Respiratory System: Lecture Six Assit - Lect.Maha Mustafa
Maha Mustafa
Respiratory system
The system designed for exchange gases (O2&CO2) between the
organisms and environments.
Blood serves as transport for O2 and CO2 away from body cell. The
body structure which are needed for gaseous exchange between the blood
and tissue called respiratory organs.
Internal gills: - are formed as outgrowth from the pharynx wall and
contained within gill slit.
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Lecture Six Assit.Lect.Maha Mustafa
3- The base of the arch may also support gill rakers, small projecting
elements that help to filter food from water.
4- A small opening, the spiracle lies in front of the first gill slit. This bear
a small pseudobrach that resemble a gill in structure, but only receives
blood already oxygenated by the true gills.
B- Bony fishes
Swim bladders:
A single elongated sac located dorsal to the digestive tract. It is called
swim-bladder, or gas-bladder or air-bladder. It has flexible walls that
contract or expand according to the ambient pressure. The walls of the
bladder contain very few blood vessels and are lined with guanine crystals,
which make them impermeable to gases. The gases in swim bladders differ
among the fishes, some swims contain pure (99%) nitrogen and some (87%)
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Lecture Six Assit.Lect.Maha Mustafa
oxygen and all contain trace of atmosphere gases (carbon dioxide, nitrogen,
oxygen and argon).
4- Respiration.
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Lecture Six Assit.Lect.Maha Mustafa
In terrestrial vertebrates and in man, the nasal cavity is also the initial
division of the respiratory tract the paired nasal cavity opens to the outside
through external nasal orifices. The nasal and oral cavities are connected by
means of choanae.
Jacobsons organs:
The vermonasal organs (VNO) or jacobsons organ, an organ of
chemoreception that is a part of the olfactory system of amphibians, reptiles
and mammals, although doesn't found in all tetrapoda
Larynx
Tetrapod besides mammals - 2 pair of cartilages: arytenoid &
cricoid
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Lecture Six Assit.Lect.Maha Mustafa
Splits into 2 primary bronchi &, in birds only, forms the syrinx at
that point.
Amphibian lungs
The frog's lungs are a pair of thin-walled sacs connected to the mouth
through an opening, the glottis. The surface area of the lungs is increased by
inner partitions which are richly supplied with blood vessels. The frog
inflates its lungs by
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Lecture Six Assit.Lect.Maha Mustafa
raising the floor of its mouth thus forcing air into the lungs.
Reptilian lungs:
The skin of reptiles is dry and scaly, so they can live in arid locations
(although many do not). However, they cannot use their skin as an organ of
gas exchange. Reptiles depend entirely on their lungs for this.
They have a much greater surface area for the exchange of gases.
They are inflated and deflated by the bellows like expansion and
contraction of the rib cage.
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Lecture Six Assit.Lect.Maha Mustafa
Bird lungs:
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Lecture Six Assit.Lect.Maha Mustafa
Mammalian lungs: