Alveoli and bloodstream
Respiration is a process of gas exchange. Respiration is necessary to supply cells with oxygen for metabolism and to remove the waste by product carbon dioxide.
The main function of respiration is the exchange of gases, namely oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Plants take in Carbon Dioxide and expel Oxygen as a by-product of cellular respiration. Animals take in Oxygen and expel Carbon Dioxide as a by-product of cellular respiration.
Internal respiration
photosynthesis and respiration are linked because they both involve the exchange of the gases; oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Respiration is a process of gas exchange. Respiration is necessary to supply cells with oxygen for metabolism and to remove the waste by product carbon dioxide.
External respiration is gas exchange in the lungs. Tissue respiration is the chemical reactions in our cells which produce energy. The most usual one is aerobic respiration: glucose + oxygen --> carbon dioxide and water.
No, respiration is the exchange of gases between the body and the external environment.
External Respiration-the process of first inhaling oxygen (02) and then proceeding to EXHALING the inhaled oxygen in the lungs in the form of carbon dioxide (C02) into the environment, then repeating the process all over again. (the entire process is commonly known as cellular respiration.)
External respiration is to breathe and facilitate gas exchange in the lungs or an analogous body cavity, depending on the organisms anatomy. Cellular respiration is the process of oxidative phosphorylation, where ATP energy is generated from biomolecules by the cell. In aerobes, the process involves a series of electron steps and oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor
The Process of gas exchange is called Respiration
Oxygen passes from the air sacs in the lungs to the blood in the capillaries, carbon dioxide passes the other way.
respiration
oxygen and carbon dioxide
Hemoglobin a heam factor in the red blood cells that binds with oxygen and carbon dioxide
External Respiration is where gasses are absorbed into the blood through the alveolar capillary beds. Internal respiration is where the gasses are transferred into the cells from the blood.
The term respiration denotes the exchange of the respiratory gases (oxygen and carbon dioxide) between the organism and the medium in which it lives and between the cells of the body and the tissue fluid that bathes them.