Respiratory Systems Flashcards

1
Q

What are respiratory organs?

A

surfaces that capture O2 and release CO2

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2
Q

How to determine how much O2 is available?

A

Concentration
Partial Pressure
Respiratory Media

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3
Q

What is concentration?

A

the amount of gas in a mixture

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4
Q

What affects concentration?

A

temperature
altitude
salinity

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5
Q

What is partial pressure?

A

the pressure exerted by gas in a mixture

determines diffusion by looking at gradient between high and low partial pressure in a system

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6
Q

What does partial pressure allow?

A

exchange of gases across cell membranes

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7
Q

How is partial pressure calculated?

A

concentration x barometric pressure

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8
Q

What is total barometric pressure?

A

the sum of all partial pressures of the different mixed gases

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9
Q

What are the two respiratory medium?

A
water (less O2 available due to higher viscosity and lower solubility
and air (more O2 available due to lower viscosity)
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10
Q

What do respiratory organs need?

A

moisture: plasma membranes need to contract with aqueous solution for diffusion
large surface area: to conduct enough gas exchange via skin, gills, lungs and/or tracheae

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11
Q

What animals use skin as a respiratory system?

A

annelids and amphibians

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12
Q

What animals use tracheae as a respiratory system?

A

insects

have tiny branching tubes that penetrate body bringing O2 directly to body cells

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13
Q

What are gills?

A

extensive out-folding of body that create a large surface area for gas exchange

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14
Q

What is ventilation in gills?

A

movement over the respiratory surface, is required to maintain pressure gradients

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15
Q

What is countercurrent exchange in fish?

A

blood flows in opposite direction of water passing over gills
ensures that water always has higher O2 partial pressure than blood

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16
Q

What are lungs?

A

derived from the gut in development and are subdivided into numerous pockets
they need a circulatory system that transports gases between the lungs and rest of the body
most species are vertebrates, spiders, and snails

17
Q

Describe the steps of the mammalian respiratory system.

A

1: air enters the nostrils to get filtered, warmed and humidified in the nasal cavity
2: air moves to the pharynx, where it proceeds through the larynx
3: air passes the epiglottis/esophagus, and moves down the trachea
4: trachea branches into two bronchi, one leading to each lung
5: bronchi branch repeatedly in each lung, into finer-and-finer tubes called bronchioles

18
Q

What do the smallest bronchioles have?

A

air sacs clustered at their tips called alveoli

19
Q

What happens at the alveoli?

A

gas exchange between the epithelial cells and senses capillaries

20
Q

What do alveoli lack?

A

cilia and mucus for protection

21
Q

What does the surfactant film do?

A

protects alveoli and reduces surface tension to keep sacs open

22
Q

How does gas exchange occur?

A

O2 rapidly diffuses across the epithelium into capillaries and the circulatory system
CO2 rapidly diffuses from the capillaries, across the epithelium and into alveoli

23
Q

What is breathing?

A

the process that conducts ventilation with alternation of inhalation and exhalation

24
Q

How does the thoracic cavity move during breathe?

A

expands during contraction of rib cage, moves down

relaxes during exhalation and moves up

25
Q

What is negative pressure breathing?

A

expansion pulls air into lungs

26
Q

What is tidal volume?

A

the volume of air inhaled with each breath

27
Q

What is vital capacity?

A

the maximum tidal volume for the lungs

28
Q

What is residual volume?

A

the air that remains in the lungs

29
Q

What is hemoglobin?

A

what most vertebrates and some invertebrates use to move O2

produced by red blood cells

30
Q

What is needed in hemoglobin?

A

essential mineral: Fe, iron to build a functional heme group needed to carry O2
has four chains that can each bind to an O2 molecules

31
Q

What is cooperative binding?

A

each addition of a bond becomes easier, the first bond always requires the most energy

32
Q

What does the dissociation curve of hemoglobin show?

A

that the protein also can release O2 in response to just small changes in partial pressure

33
Q

How are blood pH and hemoglobin efficiency related?

A

Increase in pH decreases hemoglobin efficiency

34
Q

What does blood play a role in?

A

CO2 produced by cellular respiration helps lower affinity for O2

35
Q

When is the partial pressure of blood different?

A

Low partial pressure of O2 when blood arrives in lungs

High partial pressure of CO2 when blood arrives in lungs