Respiration
Structure of Gills and Lungs
Dr. D. S. Kulkarni
Associate Professor and Head
Department of Zoology
BharatiyaMahavidyalaya, Amravati
•Why do we breathe?
•Think of all the reasons why
we need a respiratory system.
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Warning: terminology!
“Respiration” is used several different ways:
–Cellular respirationis the aerobic
breakdown of glucose in the mitochondria
to make ATP.
–Respiratory systemsare the organs in
animals that exchange gases with the
environment.
–“Respiration” is an everyday term that is
often used to mean “breathing.”
Respiration
•Respirationis the process by which
animals take in oxygen and exchange it
for carbon dioxide and water as waste
products.
•Every cell in an animal requires oxygen
to perform cellular respiration.
Respiratory system function
•Respiratory systems allow animals to
move oxygen (needed for cellular
respiration) into body tissues and remove
carbon dioxide (waste product of cellular
respiration) from cells.
Respiration
•Exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in
an organism takes place at two locations:-
Internal respiration
Blood ↔Cell
External respiration
Blood ↔External Environment
Respiration
The mechanisms, processes, and organs
used for respiration depend on the
medium, size, and complexity
of the organism.
Gas exchange by Diffusion
•Some animals simply
allow gases to diffuse
through their skins.
•These animals have a
low metabolic rate.
Why?
•All of these are aquatic
animals. Why?
Specialized structures
•Structures
specialized for gas
exchange include:
–gills (aquatic
animals)
–spiracles
(terrestrial insects)
–lungs (most
terrestrial
vertebrates)
Respiration
•The body structures which are needed
for gaseous exchange between the
blood and the surrounding medium are
known as respiratory organs.
•The system designed for exchange of
gases (O
2and CO
2) between the
organism and its environment is termed
the respiratory system.
Respiration-Diffusion
•Direct diffusion of gases through the outer
membranes can be used by organisms such as
flatworms as a means of respiration due to their
small size and simplicity.
Respiratory
organs
Respiration can occur using a variety of
respiratory organs in different animals,
including skin, gills, and tracheal systems.
Phylum Chordata
Amphibians-Skin,lungs, external gills (for
tadpoles)
Reptiles-Ventilation Lungs
Birds-Ventilation Lungs
Mammals-VentilationLungs
Gills
•Fish and many other aquatic
organisms have evolved gills to
take up the dissolved oxygen from
water.
•Gills are thin tissue filaments that
are highly branched and folded.
Fish Gills
•Fish increase gas exchange
efficiency using countercurrent
exchange.
•Running blood through the
system in the opposite direction
to water keeps a diffusion
gradient throughout the entire
exchange.
Countercurrent Exchange
•In a concurrent or parallel
system, exchange is
inefficient. Equilibrium is
reached at one end.
•In a countercurrent
system, equilibrium is not
reached, so gas
exchange continues,
increasing efficiency.
Types of Gills
•Based on their location, gills are of two
types-internal gills and external gills.
•Internal gills or true gills
•External Gills or Larval Gills
•In some animals both internal and
external gills are present.
Internal gills or true gills:
•In chordate embryo the pharyngeal cavity is
connected to the outside by a series of lateral
openings called, gill slits or pharyngeal clefts.
•The number of gill slits varies in different
chordates-140 pairs in Amphioxus, 6-14 pairs
in cyclostomes, 5 pairs in most elasmobranchs
and bony fishes, and 4 pairs in teleosts.
Structure of a true gill:
•Gill arch –a bony
structure is oriented
vertically on the side of a
fish, just behind its head.
•The gill arch provides the
support to hold a number
of comb-like structures
called gill filaments,
derived from epithelium,
on either side of an
interbranchialseptum..
Structure of a true gill:
•Gill filaments extend out
horizontally from the gill
arches.
•Each gill filament
produces many branches
called primary lamellae and
the primary lamellae branch
outinto tiny secondary
lamellae.
Structure of a true gill:
The secondary lamellae run parallel to the flow of
the water and absorb oxygenfrom the water into
the fish’s body.
Structure of Gill
A single row of lamellae on one side of branchial septum forms half gill called a
demibranchor hemibranch.
A branchial septum demibranchsforms a complete gillor holobranch. with two
attached
Mechanism Of Gill Respiration
•The gill filaments are richly supplied with blood
capillaries.
•On the surface of gill filaments exchange of gases
through water takes place.
•When water passes over the gills, the dissolved
oxygen in the water rapidly diffuses across the gills
into the bloodstream.
Mechanism Of
Gill Respiration
•The circulatory system can then carry
the oxygenated blood to the other
parts of the body.
•In animals that contain coelomic fluid
instead of blood, oxygen diffuses
across the gill surfaces into the
coelomic fluid.
External or larval gills
Larval Gills in Different Animals
Summery
•The folded surfaces of the gills provide a
large surface area to ensure that fish obtain
sufficient oxygen.
•Blood with a low concentration of oxygen
molecules circulates through the gills.
•As a result, oxygen molecules diffuse from
water (high concentration) to blood (low
concentration).
•Similarly, carbon dioxide molecules diffuse
from the blood (high concentration) to water
(low concentration).
•Why are gills so widely seen in aquatic
animals but not in land animals?
•One group of land animals that have gills
is the Isopods (“pill bugs” and “sow
bugs”). How can these organisms
survive on land with gills?
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