Your muscles produce a lot more carbon dioxide and you have to remove it from the body. You do this by breathing deeper and faster.
coz your body needs more blood when doing exercise coz it using it up probably
When done correctly, cardio exercise is the best fat burning exercise. Cardio exercises are such things a brisk walking, cross-country skiing, mini-trampolining, running, jogging, and more. Any activity that increases your heart and respiration rates for a significant duration. For more information about how to do cardio exercise correctly, see the page link, further down this page, listed under Related Questions.
Yes, especially if you're on a diet- doing a lot of exercise that your body isn't used to. The heat can tire out your body more.
They may do different activities during the day. So if a one of them is going for a run and one is just staying in watching TV. The male who is running will need more energy than the one who is relaxing as he will need to respire.
Thorndike's Law of Exercise concerns the role of practice in learning.
When doing exercise/a physical activity. I hope this is what you were looking for!
your muscle dont respire, your heart and lungs need to respire more whilst taking part in a physical activity.
they respire and photosynthesize just sometimes do one more than the other
to respire to make glucose for diffusion
We breath in more oxygen and we have to respire quickly. our heart has to pump the oxygenated blood around our body faster and take the deoxygenated blood to the lungs to get the carbon dioxide out.
Those that photosynthesize, more than they respire.
It is important for plants to respire because they convert Carbon Dioxide into Oxygen. Therefore Making the planet more hospitable to animal life.
Yes, humans do respire. Respiration is one of the seven life processes, you have to respire to live, humans are living things so they do respire.
All organisms respire. Plants do not breathe, but they respire. Animals breathe to respire.
Healthy lungs breathe between 6 (at rest) and 150 (during exercise) liters of air per minute.
During muscle contraction/relaxation, energy is used up; this happens to greater degrees depending on how strenuous the exercise may be. When you run, or during aerobic respiration, the muscle cell's oxygen uptake increases; this is because oxygen is required to produce ATP when the muscle cells are respiring aerobically.
No. It is not alive so it doesn't need to respire.