no
It gives off the Co2 which is produced in the blood vessels covering the alveoli
skin surface (integumantary system) and the lungs (alveoli) .
The tiny blood vessels that surround the alveoli arecalled alveolar capillaries
The vessels that surround the alveoli of the lungs are called pulmonary capillaries. These tiny blood vessels facilitate the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the air in the alveoli and the blood. The close proximity of the capillaries to the alveoli allows for efficient gas exchange, which is essential for respiration.
capillaries
The smallest blood vessels of the body = capillaries
Alveoli
ravioli
1. The blood vessels are completely surrounding the alveoli for easy diffusion into the blood vessels 2. The alveoli and the blood vessels are made up of a very thin layer of cells. a single layer of simple squamos epithelium. For easy diffusion 3. There is a moist layer layering the alveoli which the gases dissolve into. This aids diffusion. 4. The blood vessels are very thin, this ensures that the red blood cells enter them in a single file row. This enables maximum diffusion. 5. The shape of the red blood cells is flat, this is increases surface area for maximum absorption. 6. The alveoli itself are round, balloon shape. This also increases surface area for maximum absorption.
When air enters the empty alveoli in the lungs they become inflated. Now the blood vessels inside the alveoli can take oxygen from this air and put carbon dioxide into it.
Large surface area due to the combined spherical shape (600 million alveoli = 80 m2) Flattened epithelial cells of alveoli and close association with capillaries Short diffusion distance from alveoli to blood (0.5-1.0 um) Dense capillary network Moist surface for the solution of gases
Capillaries - Apex Cheater /Thugs