Because of the increase of pulse in your heart.
If I exersize it will increase/decrease my breathing rate because....(why you think it will increase or decrease your breathing rate)
During exercise, the breathing rate can increase to around 40-60 breaths per minute or even higher depending on the intensity of the exercise and individual fitness level. This increase in breathing rate helps to supply more oxygen to the muscles and remove carbon dioxide from the body.
Breathing.
- When we exercise or do something that is really have to make a powerful force.
it will increase
Because the demand for oxygen and glucose increases, and the heart and lungs need to speed up to keep up with the demand.
hmm heart rate maybe?
To increase the oxygen intake to stimulate the heart and lungs. You can try exercises like pursed-lip breathing and deep belly breathing to open your airways and increase the amount of oxygen in your body.
Yes. Hard, fast breathing (often the result of cardio exercise) helps to increase lung capacity.
During exercise, breathing rate and depth increase to supply more oxygen to the muscles. Factors that influence these changes include the intensity of the exercise, the body's oxygen demand, and the level of carbon dioxide in the blood.
Exercise affects your breathing through many different ways. Depending on the type of exercise (e.g. long distance, or sprinting) it could change the type of breathing that occurs. For example, for short, fast running distances, you will switch to anaerobic respiration (glucose -> energy + lactic acid) Exercise also quickens your breathing rate, and you take longer, quicker breathes. If you exercise for a long time, your breathing rate will increase even more, until you are at your maximum uptake of oxygen/air.
An increase in blood oxygen levels typically does not directly increase breathing rate; rather, it is the decrease in blood oxygen (hypoxia) or an increase in carbon dioxide levels that primarily stimulates the respiratory centers in the brain to increase breathing. However, in certain situations, such as during exercise, the body may increase breathing rate in anticipation of greater oxygen demands, even if blood oxygen levels are adequate. Overall, the body mainly responds to low oxygen or high carbon dioxide levels to regulate breathing.