the lungs
The respiratory system is responsible for transferring gases (oxygen and carbon dioxide) into and out of the blood. This process occurs in the lungs where oxygen is taken in and carbon dioxide is released.
I wouldn't exactly characterize it as separating carbon dioxide and oxygen, however, I think the answer you are looking for is the lungs which takes up oxygen into the bloodstream and expels carbon dioxide out of the bloodstream into the lungs so we can breathe it out again.
No. Why should they? You've got tiny little organs like the parathyroid glands, they obviously don't need as much "power" to work as the brain or the muscles, and carbon dioxide production is more or less directly related to how much sugar the organ "burns".
The largest thoracic organ is the lungs. They are responsible for exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide with the blood, helping to oxygenate the body and remove waste gases.
The leaf is the organ of the plant that manufactures food by photosynthesis. This process involves using the energy from sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen.
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is excreted from the lungs.
Carbon dioxide is expelled from our lungs.
lung
lungs
Your Lungs!
Amosphenic pressure is generated by the amosphenic organ, which is a structure found in some beetles. This organ helps regulate gas exchange in the insect's respiratory system by creating pressure in the tracheal system to facilitate oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide release.
Blood containing carbon dioxide flows from veins throughout the body to the heart, and then the heart pumps it to the lungs. Small air sacs (alveoli) in the lungs remove the carbon dioxide from the blood and release it into the lungs where it is exhaled.
The lungs.
lungs
The lungs are where carbon dioxide exchange takes place. Part of the respiratory system.
The lungs remove carbon dioxide from the bloodstream. As blood circulates through the lungs, carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood into the lungs to be exhaled out of the body.