The bicarbonate ion.
Gas is carried mostly by the plasma in the blood. The plasma contains dissolved gases such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, which are transported to different parts of the body. Oxygen is transported from the lungs to the tissues, while carbon dioxide is carried from the tissues back to the lungs for elimination.
CO2 (carbon dioxide) and urea.
Water, carbon dioxide and oxygen can enter a cell through the plasma membrane.
Assuming this is directed at animal physiology the answer is your blood plasma.
Blood containing carbon dioxide flows from veins throughout the body to the heart, and then the heart pumps it to the lungs. Small air sacs (alveoli) in the lungs remove the carbon dioxide from the blood and release it into the lungs where it is exhaled.Read more: How_does_the_respiratory_system_excrete_carbon_dioxide
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide, made by the cells as they do their work, moves out of the cells into the capillaries, where most of it dissolves in the plasma of the blood. Blood rich in carbon dioxide then returns to the heart via the veins.
plasma
23.8
its carried by the blood through a darker substance. Combined with haemoglobin as carboxyhaemoglobin,as bicarbonates in plasma and By dissolving in blood plasma.
plasma has a little
Carbon Dioxide and Urea
Blood plasma has both oxygen and carbon dioxide dissolved in it.
Gas is carried mostly by the plasma in the blood. The plasma contains dissolved gases such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, which are transported to different parts of the body. Oxygen is transported from the lungs to the tissues, while carbon dioxide is carried from the tissues back to the lungs for elimination.
Glucose is carried through the circulation in the blood plasma.
The carbon dioxide and oxygen are the two main gases in plasma. When blood travels to the lungs the concentration of these two gases changes.
it increases