The lungs.
The parietal pleura is actually an example of a parietal membrane, not a visceral membrane. Visceral membranes cover organs, while parietal membranes line body cavities. In the case of the pleura, the parietal pleura lines the chest cavity and the visceral pleura covers the lungs.
The membrane lining on the lung is the visceral pleura and the membrane lining the inside of the chest cavity is the parietal pleura.
No, the pleura does not cover the bronchial tree. The pleura is a double-layered membrane that surrounds the lungs and lines the chest cavity, while the bronchial tree consists of the branching airways that lead to the lungs. The outer layer of the pleura, known as the parietal pleura, lines the thoracic cavity, and the inner layer, the visceral pleura, adheres to the surface of the lungs, but does not extend into the bronchial tree itself.
Pleura is a double layered membrane surrounding each lung.
The double membrane that covers the lungs and lines the thoracic cavity is called the pleura. It consists of two layers: the visceral pleura attached to the lungs and the parietal pleura lining the thoracic cavity. The pleura produces a small amount of fluid that helps reduce friction during breathing.
the membrane on the surface of the lung is called the parietal pleura, but the membrance that lines the lungs themselves are called the visceral pleura.
A Pleura is the lung cover.
Serous membrane
The membrane which immediately covers the lungs is the visceral pleura.
visceral pleura
The innermost layer of the pleura is known as the visceral pleura. It is a thin membrane that covers the lungs and attaches to the surface of the lungs.
visceral pleura