respiration
all animals and plants(though only at night) use a process called respiration to produce energy. Animals breath in air(which is, approxamentaly, 78% nitrogen, 21.5% oxygen, 0.3% Argon and less than .04% carbon DiOxcide. This air is taken in, and animals extract about 5% of that oxygen for giving life to all the cells in our bodies. When we exhale, the air hasn't changed alot. Its, approxamentaly, 78% nitrogen, 16.5% oxygen, .3% Argon, and roughly 5% carbon DiOxcide AND OTHER GASSES. So the short answer to the question is that we breath out what we breath in.
When humans and animals exhale, they release carbon back into the air through a process called respiration. During respiration, glucose is broken down with oxygen to produce energy, resulting in the release of carbon dioxide as a byproduct. This carbon dioxide is then expelled when we breathe out.
Animals release carbon dioxide when they exhale. This gas is a byproduct of cellular respiration and is expelled from the body during the breathing process.
Animals exhale carbon dioxide and inhale oxygen just as humans do.
CO2 (carbon dioxide).
Animals, like humans, exhale carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is taken in by plants, and through the process of photosynthesis produce oxygen.
Like all animals, they inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide.
We exhale carbon dioxide or called CO2
We exhale carbon dioxide or called CO2
Those are called lungs, which are the primary respiratory organs in animals. They facilitate the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the organism and its environment during the process of breathing.
Carbon dioxide, CO2.
Animals usually exhale carbon dioxide as a waste product, but if we we work hard and can't get enough oxygen, we inhale carbon dioxide giving off an acid that gives us muscle cramps.