Respiration organ

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Respiration organ

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Respiratory organs (or breathing organs) are used by most, or all, animals to exchange the gases necessary for their life function known as respiration. These organs come in many forms, some of them apparently having independently evolved:

  • skin – some aquatic and small terrestrial animals (including some of the smallest spiders, earthworms and mites) can breathe simply by exchanging gas through the surface of their body
  • gill – many aquatic animals, like fish, and a few of the smaller terrestrial animals, like woodlice, use gills to breathe. Gills are simply layers of tissue adapted specifically to gas exchange.
  • book lung – Some spiders, scorpions, and other arthropods still use primitive book lungs, essentially gills adapted for land use, in their respiration. These are simply tissue with many wrinkles to increase their surface area.
  • Branchiostegal lung - some crabs, coconut crabs in particular, use this gill-like lung
  • Labyrinth organ – A secondary breathing organ specific to the labyrinth fish, essentially an enclosed maze of tissue, evolved from a niche in their gill structure.
  • Invertebrate trachea – tubes evolved by many arthropods, possibly from book lungs, which simply lead directly into their bodies through holes called spiracles, where their internal organs generally absorb their own air. These can be very primitive, as with some spiders, or more complex, ending with specialized air sacs, as with many insects.
  • lung – The lung is made up of muscle tissues, the cells inside the lung which collect the oxygen in the air and pass it into the blood stream via veins and carbon dioxide passes out and that is breathing respiratory.
  • diaphragm – a layer of muscular membrane located at the bottom of the thoracic cavity which in responsible in adjusting the volume of the thoracic cavity.




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