The superior vena cava and inferior vena cava are the two vessels that return oxygen-poor blood to the heart. Both empty into the heart's right atrium.
The right atrium and the right ventricle are filled with oxygen poor blood.
The right atrium and ventricle.
The right chambers have oxygen poor blood. The right atrium receives oxygen-poor blood from the body circulation, and the right ventricle pumps it to the lungs.
the perch has three chambers, and the left atrium releases oxygen rich blood to the body and right atrium brings oxygen poor blood to the heart.
actually, no. that work is reserved for atria since they are referred to as the collecting chambers of the heart. the ventricles are the pumping chambers. however, it is only the right atrium that collects oxygen poor blood. the left atrium collects oxygen rich blood coming from the lungs.
In humans, the heart has four openings (or chambers). There is an opening for the oxygen-poor blood going in, one for the oxygen-poor blood going to the lungs, an opening for the oxygen-rich blood coming back from the lungs, and one for the oxygen-rich blood circulating through the rest of the body.
Venous blood is oxygen poor (in comparison with arterial blood).
The right atrium and ventricle transport blood to the lungs. This blood is oxygen-poor and needs to be replenished. The blood returns to the heart into the left atrium and ventricle. This blood is oxygen-rich, and the heart transports it to the rest of the body.
Oxygen-poor blood is dark red; oxygen-rich blood is bright red.
Oxygen poor blood
poor
no you have oxygen high blood.
The pulmonary artery carries oxygen poor blood and the pulmonary vein carries oxygen rich blood.
If the oxygen-rich blood and the oxygen poor blood mix the amount of oxygen becomes diluted. The cells and tissues need more oxygen than they will get.