No - we exhale to remove air that has a high content of carbon dioxide. Excess oxygen is not a problem when breathing - oxygen deficiency IS a problem.
Chameleons have lungs and air passages much like humans do. They inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide like all other reptiles.
Red blood cells transport oxygen from the lungs to the tissues and remove carbon dioxide from the tissues back to the lungs for exhalation.
You do not need Carbon Dioxide for cellular respiration, it is a by-product that is transported out through the lungs when you exhale. You need oxygen and glucose to perform cellular respiration and the equation is this: Glucose + Oxygen = energy + water + CO2
by the air pressure we have inside our lungs
Yes, in a way. They take out the carbon dioxide from the blood and put the oxygen back in the blood. The sole purpose of the blood is to get oxygen from the lungs and bring it to other body parts and take the carbon dioxide back to the lungs.
No - we exhale to remove air that has a high content of carbon dioxide. Excess oxygen is not a problem when breathing - oxygen deficiency IS a problem.
No- exhaling removes carbon dioxide from your lungs- along with nitrogen that you had inhaled, and any oxygen that was not transferred to red blood cells.
when lungs inhale oxygen what doesit exhale as waste
when lungs inhale oxygen what does it exhale as waste
Oxygen
We exhale more oxygen than we use. Air contains approximately 20% Oxygen - when we breathe in - we absorb about 4% of the oxygen - and exhale the rest.
The lungs largely exhale carbon dioxide and water vapor along with the non-oxygen components of the air taken in (such as nitrogen).
oxygen goes into your lungs and then co2 comes out when mixed with a substance in your lungs.
Your lungs circulate oxygen every time you inhale and exhale. They travel through your body when you inhale to the lungs and the lungs store the oxygen, and as you exhale, carbon dioxide from the air is released.
If you are talking about what function of the body does this, the lungs take in oxygen when you inhale and remove carbon dioxide when you exhale
Inhale and exhale.
The oxygen goes into your lungs, then into your blood stream. Then carbon dioxide goes into your lungs and thats when you exhale. Oxygen changes to carbondioxide in your body.