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Gas Exchange

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Gas Exchange. Animals need a supply of O2 and a means of ... Cnidarians hydra, anemones. Flat worms. Lungs/gills. Highly folded or branched body region ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gas Exchange


1
Gas Exchange
2
Gas Exchange
  • Animals need a supply of O2 and a means of
    expelling CO2
  • They are the reactants and products of cellular
    respiration

3
Respiratory medium
  • Atmosphere has O2 at a partial pressure of 159
    mmHg
  • Varies with altitude, its about half as much at
    18,000 feet above sea level
  • Water has 1 ml of O2 per 100 ml of H2O at 0o
    Celsius
  • Varies with solubility, pressure, salts, and
    temperature
  • 0.7 ml of O2 per 100 ml of H2O at 15o Celsius
  • 0.5 ml of O2 per 100 ml of H2O at 35o Celsius

4
Water vs. air as a medium
  • Water
  • Keeps the cells moist
  • Lower oxygen concentration than air
  • Concentration varies more
  • Water is heavier
  • Air
  • Higher conc. of O2
  • Faster diffusion
  • Needs less ventilation
  • Water is lost by evaporation
  • So lungs have to be interior

5
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6
Diffusion
  • Cells are aquatic
  • O2 has to be dissolved across a respiratory
    surface to get to cells
  • O2 can diffuse through a few mm of cells
  • If a part of your body is more than a few mm
    thick then you need a way to carry the oxygen
  • Need a large respiratory surface area

7
  • Skin breathers
  • Earthworms
  • Keep skin moist and exchange gases across their
    entire surface
  • Amphibians
  • Supplement their lungs with gills

8
Form and function
  • Depends on whether
  • environment is terrestrial or aquatic
  • Simple animals have nearly every plasma membrane
    in contact with the outside environment
  • Protozoans
  • Sponges
  • Cnidarians hydra, anemones
  • Flat worms

9
  • Lungs/gills
  • Highly folded or branched body region
  • Creates a large surface area for absorption
  • Gills
  • External
  • Problem - losing water due to
  • osmolarity of salt water
  • Lungs
  • Internal prevents drying out of
  • membranes
  • Allow use of air as a medium
  • Terrestrial life poses problem of
  • dessication

10
Gills
  • Invertebrates can have simple gills
  • Echinodermata have simple flaps over much of
    their body
  • Crustaceans have regionalized gills
  • Ventilation have to keep water moving over the
    gills, either by paddling water in or staying on
    the move
  • This requires energy
  • Gill slits of fish are believed to be
    evolutionary ancestors of Eustachian tubes

11
Invertebrate gills
12
Gills
Specialized for gas exchange in water. Have to
be efficient 10,000X less O2 in water than in
air. O2 and CO2 readily diffuse between blood
and water. Countercurrent Exchange blood in
capillaries flows in opposite direction from
the water passing over the gills.
Along the capillary, a steep diffusion gradient
favors transfer of oxygen into the blood.
13
Countercurrent Flow in Sharks
14
Countercurrent vs. Concurrent Flow
15
Countercurrent exchange
  • Speeds transfer of O2 to blood
  • Blood and water move toward each other in gills
    so as blood is more loaded with O2 its running
    into water with even more O2 dissolved so it can
    take on the maximum load
  • Gills can remove 80 of the oxygen from the water
    passing over it

16
Tracheae
  • Spiracles are holes all over an insects body.
  • From the spiracles, tubes branch out
  • Finest branches (0.001mm) reach every cell
  • Insects still have circulatory system to carry
    other materials

17
Respiratory Exchange in Insects
Spiracles of Two Insects
18
Lungs
  • Dense networks of capillaries under epithelium
    forms the respiratory surface
  • Snails Internal mantle
  • Spiders book lungs
  • Frogs balloon like lungs
  • Vertebrates highly folded epithelium
  • humans ( 100m2 surface area)

19
Lungs
  • Enclosed by double walled sac whose layers are
    stuck together by surface tension, allowing them
    to slide past each other
  • System of branching ducts
  • Nasal cavity ? pharnyx ? open glotis ? larynx
    (voicebox) ? trachea (windpipe) ? 2 bronchi
    (bronchus) ? many bronchioles ? cluster of air
    sacs called alveoli (alveolus)

20
Pulmonary Circulation
21
Alveolar Exchange
22
Ventilating the Lungs
  • Frogs use positive pressure breathing gulp air
    and push it down
  • Mammals negative pressure breathing
  • Suction pulls air down into a vacuum
  • During exercise rib muscles pull up ribs
    increasing lung volume, and lowering pressure
  • But ribs are only 1/3 of Shallow breathing

23
Diaphragm
  • Sheet of muscle at bottom of thoracic cavity
  • During inhalation it descends
  • During exhalation it contracts

24
Volumes
  • Tidal volume The volume of air inhaled/exhaled
  • 500 ml in humans
  • Tidal capacity maximum volume
  • 3400 ml for girls 4800ml for boys
  • Residual volume air left in alveoli after
    exhalation

25
Control
  • Medulla oblongata and pons
  • negative feedback loop when stretched too much
    lungs send message back to brain to exhale
  • CO2 levels are monitored in the brain
  • CO2 dissolves in water and forms carbonic acid
    with sodium carbonate salts
  • More carbonic acid lowers pH of blood and the
    medulla responds by increasing depth and rate of
    breathing

26
Hyperventilating
  • Trick the brain by purging blood of CO2 so
    breathing slows

27
Loading/Unloading Gases
  • Substances diffuse down the Conc. Grad.
  • In the atm. theres 760 mmHg of gas
  • O2 is 21 of this so 0.21 x 760 159 mmHg
  • This is the partial pressure of oxygen PO2
  • CO2 partial pressure(PCO2) 0.23 mmHg
  • Liquids in contact with air have the same partial
    pressure

28
Gas Exchange at Alveoli
  • Blood at lung high PCO2 and low PO2
  • At lungs CO2 diffuses out and O2 diffuses in
  • Now blood has a low PCO2 and high PO2
  • In cells doing respiration there is a high PCO2
    and low PO2 so the CO2 diffuses into blood and
    O2 diffuses into the cells

29
Gas Exchange Throughout the Body
30
Respiratory pigments
  • Colored by metals
  • Invertebrates have hemocyanin which uses copper
    making blood blue
  • Vertebrates hemoglobin which uses iron to carry
    the oxygen. Each hemoglobin can carry 4 O2s,
    each blood cell has many hemoglobins

31
If blood is red why do your veins look blue?
  • Blood is a bright red in its oxygenated form
    (i.e., leaving the lungs), when hemoglobin is
    bound to oxygen to form oxyhemoglobin. It's a
    dark red in its deoxygenated form (i.e.,
    returning to the lungs), when hemoglobin is bound
    to carbon dioxide to form carboxyhemoglobin.
    Veins appear blue because light, penetrating the
    skin, is absorbed and reflected back to the eye.
    Since only the higher energy wavelengths can do
    this (lower energy wavelengths just don't have
    the oomph), only higher energy wavelengths are
    seen. And higher energy wavelengths are what we
    call "blue."
  • From straightdope.com

32
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33
Dissociation curves
  • Changes in PO2 will cause hemoglobin to pick up
    or dump oxygen
  • Lower PO2 means hemoglobin will dump oxygen
  • Bohr shift Drops in pH makes hemoglobin dump O2

34
Diving mammals
  • Weddell seals
  • Dive 200 500 m
  • 20 min 1 hr. under water
  • Compared to us it has 2x
  • as much O2 per kg of weight
  • 36 of our O2 is in lungs 51 in blood
  • Seals have 5 and 70 respectively
  • more blood, huge spleen stores 24L blood
  • More myoglobin (dark meat)
  • Slow pulse

35
Liquid Ventilation
  • Perfluorocarbon liquids
  • 65 mL O2 per 100 mL
  • Problems with expelling the CO2
  • Remember this is a liquid 1.8 times as dense as
    water so it is hard to breath
  • Could someday be used for diving, or medical
    applications (ex supporting injured lungs,
    radiology)
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