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Comparative physiology Lecture -3Oxygen (Respiration ) By : Saib Al owini P(16-25) 1 Four basic respiratory systems • 1. Diffusion across integument • 2. Gills: evagenation ( turned out) May be found in sac • 3. Lungs invagenation ( turned in) Pulmonate land snail -1stTerm lung used if meida is air or water • 4. Tracheae - Spiracles and trachea - Blood dosnt transport system 2 Respiratory in water • Small animals diffusion • Large animals respiratory organs • Animal without specialized resp organ. - small sphere : with small respiratory surface -enlargement by deviation on sphere: large surface - O2 Concentration on surface which sufficient to animal for metabolic ( by diffusion )is 3 2 • FO2= VO2 * R / 6K FO2= con surface O2 ( as fraction of atm pressure) VO2 = rateO2 consumption cm3/cm3 R2 = radius K =diffusion constant K= cm3 of oxygen that will diffuse /min in area 1cm3 and 1atm 4 Example • • • • • Animal has FO2= ? VO2 =0.001 ml /g R2 = 1 cm -6 K =11*10 • O2 pressure required = 15 atm (not found) • If animal 1mm ------- 0.15 atm O2 found • Aerated Water have 0.21 atm o2 5 Animals which use diffusion • • - 1- small as protozoa 2- very low metabolic rate as Jellyfish has Flattened body 1% organic the other are water salts So has low metabolic Wide but thin body wide respiratory surface Active cell on surface no distance diffusion 6 • If the animal is larger it will have • Flattened body • Or increase respiratory surface Ex , Sponges , corals 7 Animal with respiratory organs • Diffusion is not suffice. • Then we found respiratory organs with - Large surface - Thinner membrane 8 Animals with respiratory organs • Four basic respiratory systems • 1. Diffusion across integument • 2. Gills: evagenation ( turned out) May be found in sac • 3. Lungs invagenation ( turned in) Pulmonate land snail -1stTerm lung used if meida is air or water • 4. Tracheae - Spiracles and trachea - Blood dosnt transport system 9 Effective respiratory organs : -Large surface -- thin membrane -* Gills usually in water -* lungs usually in air - 10 11 12 13 14 • Some lunges live in water Sea cucumber use lung in water -* Some gills may modified to act in air but most fish have been Asphyxiated in air. Water support gills , air cannot so gills tend to stick together by surface adhesion. Resulted in decreasing respiratory surface 15 Sea Cucumbers are the only marine invertebrate with a true tidal lung that suctions water in and then pushes it back out the same aperature (Anus) 16 Ventilation of gills • Water must renewal by various mechanisms 1- moving gill through water - Small organism, some aquatic insects (may flay larvae). - Large Energy required to resist water - Ex, large aquatic salamander mudpuppy 17 Gill ventillation 18 Ventilation of gills • 2- moving water over respiratory surface: More feasible A- by ciliary's action Mussel , clams - Spongy move water by flagella. B- moving water by mechanical pump like devise 19 20 Primitive mollusk 21 22 B- moving water by mechanical pump like devise • Fish and crabs • Low coast • 3 - movement of animals ( immobile gill cover) • Cannt survive without swimming • Sequid ,octopus take water into mantel cavity then eject it through siphon 23 24 Gas exchange and water flow • For active gas exchange : - Highly active fish have the largest relative gill area ex(: fast mackerel has gill surface equal 50 times of bottom living goose fish ) - High rate of water flow - gill cavity provide protection , permit water to perfuse over gills. 25 26 Counter current • Several major gill arches on each side From each arise two rows of gill filaments Tips of filament arch meet Each filament caries densely packed flat lamella in rows 27 28 -Water flow between lamella opposite to blood flow -What is the aim!! -What is the difference if they flow together or cross other !!! 29 30 efferent & afferent arteries gill arch secondary lamella filament secondary lamella aff. water Scheid and Piiper (1997) filament eff. counter-current flow is key to oxygen 31 extraction efficiency in aquatic respiration 32 Oxygen transfer from the environmental medium to the blood (Part 1) No respiratory system is designed this way33 by cross-current exchange 34 Oxygen transfer from the environmental medium to the blood (Part 2) 35 36 • Oxygen uptake to blood still even highest level of o2 reach • Water will meet blood with lower o2 even the end • Water leave with lost of 70 -90 % • but mammals remove ¼ air initial o2 37 Oxygen transfer from the environmental medium to the blood in a tidally ventilated lung 38 39 • Concurrent : • Little o2 uptake • More energy consuming • Crabs : have low efficiency counter current Because blood diffusion briar is grater European shore crab 7-30 extraction In other crabs 50% 40 What is water resistance levels through the gills? • Hughes (1966) calculated that flow through gills of a 150 g tench (Tinca) for a pressure of 5 mm water ~ 10.1 ml/s • Normal volume of water passed through fish gills = 1-2 ml/s.( 0.02 mm between lamella) • Conclusion: Gill lamellae do not offer much resistance to flow 41 How do fish pump water over their gills? • Double set of pumps (oral cavity and opercular cavity) • Volume of oral cavity can be changed by lowering jaw (pump 1) • Volume of second pump changed by increased movements of opercular flap (pump 2) 42 43 • The pressure in the two cavities are linked • Pressure drops when mouth begins to open; increases as mouth is closed 44 Opercular pumping in fish • Gill chamber is rigid (opercular cavity) • Can be sealed by a flap (operculum) • Bottom of the opercular chamber is muscular and can be raised or lowered • Pump cycle: – Mouth open, operculum closed • Bottom of chamber drops, chamber fills – Mouth closed • Bottom of chamber is raised, squeezing water out through operculum 45 Buccal-opercular pump during inhalation (Eckert, Fig. 13-40) 46 13 Buccal-opercular pump during exhalation 47 14 Ventilation Buccal-opercular pumping 48 49 50 Ram ventilation • Some fish use water pumping; they survive by swimming to pass water through gills = ram ventilation • Some fish species only use ram ventilation (e.g., tunas) • Other species use water pumping at low speeds, switch to ram ventilation at high speeds • Fish adjust openings of their mouths to modulate water flow 51 • Example: • Mackerel swimming in water with less oxygen opened their mouths more • The lowered oxygen supply was compensated by increased water flow 52 53 • Ram ventilation is more economic on high speed • If low oxygen mouth opining increase 54 Coughing • Solid particles in water tend to caught in gills • Closed lips with enlargement of buccal cavity lowering pressure • As coughing in animal • Crabs revers each 1-10/min To maintain gills clear . 55 56