Animal Respiration
Respiration is the exchange of life-sustaining gases, such as oxygen, between an animal and its environment. Gas exchange occurs by diffusion, moving necessary gases like oxygen into animals and taking away waste gases like carbon dioxide. Although animals have different ways of moving gases in and out of their bodies, gas exchange between the animal and its environment occurs across a moist surface.
Most animal respiration involves four steps:
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Taking air in (inspiration) and pushing air out (expiration). The term breathing refers to the processes of inspiration and expiration in humans and many other animals.
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Circulating gases throughout the body.
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Exchanging needed gases for unnecessary gases.
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Using the needed gases.
Depending on the complexity of their bodies and the environment in which they live, animals evolved different systems to achieve respiration. Four basic types of gas-exchange systems occur in animals:
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Integumentary exchange occurs through the outer surface of some small animals that constantly stay moist.
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Gills are structures that extend outward from an animal’s body to exchange gases in watery environments.
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Tracheal exchange systems rely on a network of tubes that end in holes to move oxygen and carbon dioxide throughout the bodies of certain types of insects.
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Lungs are structures that extend into an animal’s body, creating moist internal surfaces that use diffusion to transport gases into and out of the body.
For questions 1–4, use the terms below to identify which part of respiration is blocked by the condition stated in the question.
a. Breathing
b. Circulation
c. Gas exchange
d. Cellular respiration
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A girl with anemia doesn’t have enough of the protein hemoglobin to carry oxygen in her red blood cells.
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A boy with exercise-induced asthma suffers narrowing of his airways during exercise.
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A woman has emphysema, which damages the air sacs of her lungs, reducing the amount of surface area for gas exchange.
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A man accidentally swallows a large piece of food that extends his food tube so that it pinches off his windpipe.
For questions 5–8, use the following terms to label each type of gas-exchange system in the figure. Also, state one example of an animal that would have each system.
a. Integumentary exchange
b. Lungs
c. Gills
d. Tracheal exchange system

The following are answers to the practice questions presented.
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The answer is b. Circulation.
Circulation is affected because she can’t effectively circulate the oxygen she breathes.
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The answer is a. Breathing.
Breathing is affected because he can’t draw in enough air.
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The answer is c. Gas exchange.
Gas exchange is affected because she doesn’t have enough surface area in her lungs.
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The answer is a. Breathing.
Breathing is affected because he can't inhale any air.
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The answer is d. Tracheal exchange system.
The tracheal exchange systems occur in insects like grasshoppers.
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The answer is c. Gills.
Fish and lobsters are two examples of organisms with gills.
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The answer is b. Lungs.
Lungs occur in animals like mammals and birds.
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The answer is a. Integumentary exchange.
Earthworms use integumentary exchange.

Biology Glossary
anemia
A low number of red blood cells or low level of hemoglobin; may be caused by dietary deficiencies, metabolic disorders, hereditary conditions, or damaged bone marrow.

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antigen
A foreign substance in the body that causes an immune response.

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body mass index
The BMI is the result of a formula that uses your weight and height to determine whether you need to lose weight.

Biology Glossary
carbohydrates
Energy-packed compounds consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen that provide quick fuel for organisms.

Biology Glossary
cellulose
A form of carbohydrate that has a structural role in living organisms (animals and plants).

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centrifuge
A machine that is used to separate blood cells and platelets from plasma.

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chloroplasts
Plant cells that use energy from sunlight to create food.

Biology Glossary
cytoplasm
The fluid contained within animal cells. Also called plasma.

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disaccharides
Carbohydrate molecules in which 2 monosaccharide molecules are joined together. Disaccharides consist of 6 to 14 carbon atoms.

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DNA
Stands for deoxyribonucleic acid. Large molecules found in all living things that carry genetic information.

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electron microscope
A high-powered, expensive device that uses beams of electrons to bring the finest details of cells into focus.

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endocrine system
A system of glands that secrete different types of hormones that help regulate organisms.

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endoplasmic reticulum
The ER is a series of canals that connects the nucleus of animal cells to the cytoplasm outside those cells.

Biology Glossary
equilibrium
The state of a chemical reaction in which the amounts on each side of the reaction have stabilized.

Biology Glossary
eukaryotes
Organisms — including plants and animals, as well as fungi, protozoa, and most algae — with cells that contain a nucleus and chromosomes.

Biology Glossary
Golgi apparatus
A component within cells that packages and distributes hormones, enzymes, and other cell products to other organelles or outside the cell.

Biology Glossary
hemoglobin
An iron-containing molecule in red blood cells that carries oxygen around the body.

Biology Glossary
heterotrophs
Animals — including herbivores, carnivores, and omnivores — that feed on other living organisms.

Biology Glossary
homeostasis
The processes used by the body to constantly achieve and maintain balance.

Biology Glossary
integument
The skin or outer surface of an animal. Small animals such as earthworms use integumentary exchange to exchange gases with the environment.

Biology Glossary
Krebs cycle
A method of describing the steps involved in the chemical process of respiration.

Biology Glossary
lipoproteins
Compounds such as HDL and LDL that carry cholesterol through the bloodstream; made from a fat (lipid) and a protein.

Biology Glossary
lysosomes
Specialized cellular organelles formed by the Golgi apparatus that help to clean up the cell by breaking down harmful cell products and removing dead organelles.

Biology Glossary
maceration
A process, such as chewing, that physically breaks down food into pieces.

Biology Glossary
matrix
The extracellular fluid in which animal cells float.

Biology Glossary
mitochondria
An organelle in animal cells that combines food with oxygen to supply energy to cells.

Biology Glossary
monosaccharides
Carbohydrate molecules in which simple sugars consist of three to seven carbon atoms.

Biology Glossary
nuclear membrane
A two-layer structure that separates the nucleus from the cytoplasm in animal cells.

Biology Glossary
organelles
Structures that float inside the fluid of cells; used during metabolic processes.

Biology Glossary
osmosis
A mechanism that moves water and nutrients into and throughout a plant.

Biology Glossary
peristalsis
The action of food being moved down the esophagus and through the entire digestive tract.

Biology Glossary
peroxisomes
Sacs of enzymes within animal cells that help protect the cell by breaking down accumulations of toxic products such as hydrogen peroxide.

Biology Glossary
photosynthesis
The biochemical process that plants use to acquire energy from the sun.

Biology Glossary
plasma membrane
The membrane that holds fluid within animal cells. Also called the cell membrane.

Biology Glossary
polysaccharides
Carbohydrate molecules that are formed by many long chains of monosaccharides.

Biology Glossary
prokaryotes
Organisms — such as bacteria and blue-green algae — with cells that do not contain a nucleus.

Biology Glossary
ribosomes
Components within cells that assist in making proteins from amino acids.

Biology Glossary
RNA
Stands for ribonucleic acid. In animals, works with DNA to produce proteins needed throughout the body.

Biology Glossary
ruminants
Mammals — such as cattle, sheep, and goats — that can break down and digest cellulose.