If you are having trouble breathing, see a doctor or go to the emergency room.
No, it is not possible for a tree to grow in your lungs.
Yes, ALL snakes, indeed all reptiles have lungs.
Any plant can pollinate with any plant. Just so long as there's bees there. Bees accidentally get pollen from other plants on there feet and can ACCIDENTALLY cross-pollinate. So, yes, a pear CAN pollinate with a plum tree.
Yes they do.
It's called the "bronchial tree".
The bronchial tree is called so because its structure resembles that of a tree, with the main trachea branching out into smaller bronchi and bronchioles, similar to the branches of a tree extending from the trunk. This branching structure helps in distributing air to the lungs efficiently.
Yes they do. All frogs, salamanders and Caecillians have lungs. However the tadpoles do not and develop lungs in the time that they live in water.
In anatomy, doctors refer to the tree-like branches of the lungs as the bronchial tree. This structure includes the main bronchi that branch from the trachea, which further subdivide into smaller bronchi and bronchioles, eventually leading to the alveoli where gas exchange occurs. The bronchial tree plays a crucial role in conducting air to the lungs and facilitating ventilation.
I think this is the description of what the tiny air passages in your lungs look like. When casts were first made of the inside structure of the lungs, (of dead people!) they resemble exactly the trunk branches and twigs of a tree. This is the "tree" of tiny pipes that allows the air to reach a huge surface area in the lungs to transfer gases into and out of the blood.
They do not have lungs, and don't breathe.
No, the pleura does not cover the bronchial tree. The pleura is a double-layered membrane that surrounds the lungs and lines the chest cavity, while the bronchial tree consists of the branching airways that lead to the lungs. The outer layer of the pleura, known as the parietal pleura, lines the thoracic cavity, and the inner layer, the visceral pleura, adheres to the surface of the lungs, but does not extend into the bronchial tree itself.
Absalom. He had long hair and he got caught in the bough of a tree while fleeing from David's army.