Blood, including plasma (the liquid part), red blood cells, white blood cells and plates are a tissue. They do not make tissues. Red bone marrow does makes this tissue.
red blood cells are destroyed by macrophages in the blood to form heme and globin
The cells that carry hemoglobin are red blood cells. Their scientific name is erythrocytes.
Small and red, rich in haemoglobin, carry oxygenated blood to tissues of the body
Hemoglobin is the substance in the blood responsible for carrying oxygen to the tissues. It is a protein found in red blood cells that binds to oxygen in the lungs and releases it to the body's tissues and organs.
Red blood cells drop off oxygen to tissues and cells in the body through the process of diffusion in capillaries. Oxygen molecules bind to hemoglobin in red blood cells in the lungs and are released when the red blood cells reach tissues with lower oxygen concentration.
The main difference between red blood cells and white blood cells is their function. Red blood cells primarily carry oxygen to tissues and carbon dioxide away from tissues. White blood cells are a key part of the immune system and help fight off infections and foreign invaders in the body.
Delivers oxygen to the body tissues via the blood
Red blood cells carry oxygen that it picks up at the lungs and carries it to the tissues cells.
The blood cells responsible are red blood cells. White blood cells fight disease.
Red blood cells transport oxygen from the lungs to the tissues and remove carbon dioxide from the tissues back to the lungs for exhalation.
Spongy, which makes red blood cells, and compact.
No, white blood cells do not contain hemoglobin; red blood cells contain hemoglobin (and it is the hemoglobin that gives them their red color).