one
Usually 10 g/L
Hemoglobin is a protein, i.e. a molecule, not a cell. About 97% of the "dry content" of red blood cells is hemoglobin. The exact number of hemoglobin protein molecules is not particularly well defined since red blood cells vary in weight but the range could probably be estimated from that 97% statistic.
No,many insects do not use blood to carry oxygen.Annelids like earthworms have heamoglobin.
One unit of red blood cells typically raises the hemoglobin level by about 1 gram per deciliter.
gorillas have a heart with 4 chambers and a blood system that uses hemoglobin
Nutrients, oxygen, hemoglobin, lipids, glucose, plasma, enzyme, and many other elements.
4.32
There are many ways in which a low hemoglobin can occur. Among these include young ladies in their menstruating cycle, pregnant women, blood donating frequently, wounds, nosebleeds, Aplastic Anemia, Cirrhosis, Leukemia, etc. Low hemoglobin usually occurs because the body is too slow to produce more red blood cells, but do not be alarmed yet, go to a doctor before anything. Sometimes a low hemoglobin is actually normal for some people.
250 million X 4 = < 1 billion4- is how many o2 molecules a single HBn carries assuming they are full saturated(which they almost never are)Actually, one hemoglobin molecule can carry 4 molecules of oxygen. There are ~1 billion molecules of oxygen in each RED BLOOD CELL.
Hemoglobin is found in the blood of all vertebrates and is responsible for carrying oxygen from your lungs to the rest of your body. It can also be found in many invertebrates as well as some plants and funghi.
Elephants, like all mammals, have red blood cells that contain hemoglobin molecules. Each hemoglobin molecule contains four iron atoms but does not contain any oxygen atoms. Oxygen is carried by red blood cells bound to the iron atoms in hemoglobin.
Hemoglobin, and the formula is C3032 H4316 O780 N780 S8 Fe4 Blood is complex in that it contains many different complex structures, including red blood cells (RBC or Erythrocyte), white blood cells (WBC or Leukocyte), platelets (Blastocytes), and plasma (made up of proteins, water, etc.). Unfortunately, the scientific name we use to identify this mixture is simply just blood. As for the original scratched out assumption, Hemoglobin is an oxygen carrying protein FOUND inside red blood cells. Hemoglobin is found in blood, not blood itself.