yes
because it makes from tissue.
Trachea
In the fetal pig, the esophageal opening is located dorsal to the glottis. The esophagus lies to the top of the stomach, in close proximity to the diaphragm.
Most insects have small holes in the exoskeleton that is called the trachea. Oxygen is delivered directly to the insects tissues via the trachea.
The pig esophagus is lined with a stratified squamous epithelium designed for food transport and protection from abrasion, while the trachea is composed of cartilage rings and lined with pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium to facilitate air passage and filtration. The esophagus lacks cartilage support, has a mucus-secreting submucosa, and undergoes peristalsis to move food to the stomach, unlike the trachea.
It would be an IMAGINARY organism. Sorry- but they do not really exist, so they are not an organism.
The singular for trachea is "trachea". The plural is "tracheae".
No trachea is not the lung.
Trachea size
the trachea
tThe trachea ends at the bronchia which takes air from the trachea to the lungs.
That tube is the trachea.
the trachea (windpipe)
Trachea is a common biological term for an airway through which respiratory air transport takes place in organisms. The cells that line the trachea have minuscule hairs, which collect any dust that you inhale, and prevent it from entering your lungs. It is then removed by coughing. To prevent food from entering your windpipe, it has a small flap of skin at the entrance (epiglottis). When you eat, this flap closes over your trachea to prevent food from entering. * Vertebrate trachea, in terrestrial vertebrates, such as birds and mammals, the trachea allows oxygen and carbon dioxide to move from the throat to the lungs * Invertebrate trachea, in terrestrial invertebrates, such as onychophorans and insects, tracheae conduct air from outside the organism directly to all internal tissues
trachea leads to the lungs
Anything that breathes has a trachea.
trachea is the breathing of insects
because the trachea is gene