Yah suppose to have the answers gosh not let anyone answer them
No, oxygen cannot be absorbed through the digestive system. Oxygen is absorbed by the lungs during the process of respiration, where it is exchanged with carbon dioxide. The digestive system is responsible for breaking down food and absorbing nutrients, not gases like oxygen.
Oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged by way of the circulatory system. Cells use oxygen for energy and produce carbon dioxide as a waste. Capillaries are where this exchange occurs. Veins carry this product back to the heart. This blood goes to the lungs were you blow off the carbon dioxide and take in oxygen. So the circulatory system and lungs work together to exchange gases.
Nutrients and Waste
Oxygen, nutrients, waste products, hormones, and electrolytes are exchanged between the body cells and the blood plasma. This exchange occurs through the capillaries that connect the circulatory system with the cells in the tissues. Oxygen and nutrients are delivered to the cells, while waste products and carbon dioxide are removed from the cells and transported back to the excretory organs for elimination.
The exchange occurs in the space between the cells in something called interstitial fluid. It literally means tissue fluid. It is what is between the capillaries that carry blood and lymph and the cell membrane through which the nutrients and waste have to pass.
Yes, oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged in the human body through the process of respiration. When we inhale, we take in oxygen from the air which is used by our cells for energy production. Carbon dioxide, a waste product of this process, is then expelled from the body when we exhale.
Planaria have a simple transport system that consists of a network of branching gastrovascular canals. These canals distribute nutrients, oxygen, and waste products throughout the organism's body. Nutrients and gases are exchanged directly through the body surface into the surrounding environment.
Nutrients, oxygen, and waste are exchanged between the fetus and the mother through the placenta, a temporary organ that develops during pregnancy. The mother's blood containing nutrients and oxygen passes through the placenta, where it comes into close contact with the fetal blood vessels. Through diffusion and active transport processes, nutrients and oxygen are transferred from the mother's blood to the fetal blood, while waste products such as carbon dioxide are transferred from the fetal blood to the mother's blood for elimination.
Blood is the liquid that carries oxygen, nutrients, and waste throughout the body. It is pumped by the heart through the circulatory system, delivering essential substances to cells and removing metabolic waste products.
Gaseous waste is expelled from the body primarily through respiration. A process called gas exchange takes place in the lungs. With every breath we take, some quantity of the waste gases (like carbon dioxide, or CO2) in our blood is exchanged for oxygen (O2) in the air inspired. Note that anything else in the air that we inhale can be carried across and into the blood.
The digestive and respiratory systems work together to provide the body with essential nutrients and oxygen. During respiration, oxygen is inhaled into the lungs, where it is exchanged for carbon dioxide in the bloodstream. This oxygen-rich blood is then delivered to cells, including those in the digestive system, to support metabolic processes. As the digestive system breaks down food, it produces energy that requires oxygen, while also generating carbon dioxide as a waste product, which is then expelled through the respiratory system.
The circulatory system in the body transports blood, nutrients, and other materials through a network of blood vessels. The heart pumps oxygen-rich blood from the arteries to various tissues and organs in the body. Nutrients and oxygen are exchanged with carbon dioxide and waste products in the capillaries, and then the blood returns to the heart through veins to be oxygenated again.