No, invertebrates do not breathe carbon dioxide. All animals breathe oxygen.
It uses it's gills to extract oxygen from the water to oxygenate it's blood and also to expel carbon dioxide from the blood.
Yes! CO2 as you know its carbon dioxide so fish is a living things and gives out carbon dioxide.
They absorb carbon dioxide from the water - and release oxygen. This keeps the water's oxygen level safe for the fish to survive.
The gills of fish are equivalent to the lungs in humans. Their job ois to exchange the dissolved oxygen from the water with the carbon dioxide of the shark's blood.
Carbon Dioxide
carbon dioxide
nought percent
carbon dioxide...
A fish takes in Oxygen and passes out Carbon dioxide and Ammonia through its gills.
No, they take in oxygen.
The water that the fish swims in passes over the gills - these work like our own lungs - taking in oxygen, and expelling carbon dioxide. This is why you need to change the water in the tank on a regular basis - because the level of carbon dioxide increases daily.
carbon dioxide. All organisms release carbon dioxide.