Red Blood Cells
The haemoglobine found in the red blood corpuscles carries the carbon dioxide in the form of carboxyhaemoglobin .
When hemoglobin carries carbon dioxide, it forms carbaminohemoglobin. This occurs in the red blood cells as carbon dioxide is transported from the tissues to the lungs to be exhaled.
Carbon dioxide is probably the most important.
During respiration, carbon dioxide diffuses from tissues into the bloodstream in the capillaries. The blood then carries the carbon dioxide to the lungs, where it is exhaled out of the body during the process of breathing.
Hemoglobin
To the lungs, to be exhaled.
Red blood cells carry most carbon dioxide wastes away from the cells of the body.
The lungs are the organs responsible for carrying oxygen into the bloodstream and removing carbon dioxide from the body. Oxygen is absorbed into the blood in the lungs and then transported to the rest of the body, while carbon dioxide is released from the blood into the lungs to be exhaled.
Carbon Dioxide
It allows the blood to carry oxygen, so in a way it carries oxygen
Red blood cells have the highest affinity for both oxygen and carbon dioxide. This is due to the presence of the protein hemoglobin in red blood cells, which binds to oxygen and carbon dioxide molecules. Hemoglobin helps transport oxygen from the lungs to tissues and carries carbon dioxide away from the tissues to be exhaled from the lungs.
carbon dioxide is expelled from cells into the blood stream, carried to the lungs, and exhaled.