Depending on what level you're at there are a couple of answers. Lower level, it's carried out by the blood. A-level or higher you're going to have to talk about ligand substitutions...which are nasty.
oxygen is carried by the red blood cells, but carbon dioxide is separated from the air you breathe in the lungs, then exhaled.
carbon dioxide
75 percent of carbon dioxide is carried by Rowan Atkinson, in the blood.
nothing it just carried by blood to out of the body
Red blood cells.
Carbon dioxide in humans is mostly carried in the blood as bicarbonate ions (HCO3-). This process occurs in red blood cells where carbon dioxide combines with water to form carbonic acid, which then dissociates into bicarbonate ions and hydrogen ions. Around 70% of carbon dioxide is transported this way in the blood.
Carbon dioxide is carried by blood in three forms: dissolved in plasma, as bicarbonate ions, and bound to hemoglobin. This allows for efficient transport of carbon dioxide from tissues to the lungs for elimination.
its carried by the blood through a darker substance. Combined with haemoglobin as carboxyhaemoglobin,as bicarbonates in plasma and By dissolving in blood plasma.
Oxygen is carried by hemoglobin in red blood cells, forming oxyhemoglobin. Carbon dioxide is carried in the blood mainly in the form of bicarbonate ions, but also as carbaminohemoglobin and dissolved CO2. These gases are exchanged between the blood and tissues in the lungs and other tissues in the body.
Yes. It is carried through the veins to the lungs to be exhaled.
the bloody part
Oxygen is carried into the blood by binding to hemoglobin in red blood cells, forming oxyhemoglobin. Carbon dioxide is carried into the blood in three ways: dissolved in plasma, bound to hemoglobin as carbaminohemoglobin, and converted to bicarbonate ions through the bicarbonate buffer system.