Top Banner
Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems
21

Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Dec 21, 2015

Download

Documents

Charla Pitts
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Comparative Vertebrate Physiology

Vertebrate Respiration Systems

Page 2: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Respiration systems

Gill External invagination High surface area

Lung Internal invagination Ventilation

Page 3: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Patterns of air flowAmphibiansFishes

Countercurrent flow

Page 4: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Patterns of air flowMammalsBirds

Crosscurrent flow Tidal flow

Page 5: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Cutaneous respiration Increase skin surface area Ineffective above 1,000g When PO2 low use reduced lungs

Lake Titicaca in Peru

Page 6: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Lamella gills Anatomy

Gill arches, filaments, secondary lamellae

Page 7: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Gill ventilation Mouth Buccal cavity (positive pressure) Operculum

Page 8: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Countercurrent flow Is it more efficient?

100 90 80 70

50 60 70blood

water

40

Unidirectional

90 80 70

80 70 60

water

blood

100

90

Counter directional

Page 9: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Ram ventilation Fast swimmers (i.e., tuna, some sharks)

Forcing water across gill surface

Page 10: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Aquatic respiration Physiological consequences

Variable

Density (Kg/l)

Viscosity (cPi)

O2 diffusion

coefficient

O2 content

Water Air

1.0 0.001

1.14 0.02

0.000025 0.2

1 - 6 210(ml/L)

Page 11: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Aquatic respiraton Aquatic: 1L water for 1 ml O2

Terrestrial: 25 ml of air for 1 ml O2

It’s harder to breathe under water

Page 12: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Amphibians Varied respiratory systems

Cutaneous, gills, lungs Positive pressure buccal pump

IV phases

Page 13: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Reptiles Negative intrapulmonary pressure All have ribs and intercostal muscles (except

chelonians)

Crocodiles Muscle contraction

Page 14: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Reptiles Chelonians

Rigid carapace (ribs?) and diaphragm Breathe by movement of girdles and muscle

contraction

Page 15: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Birds Air sac system

Connected to trachea, lungs and long bones One way system

Page 16: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Birds Two breaths to remove air

from pathway

Page 17: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Extremes of respiration 1. Increase in altitude

PO2 at 5,800 m is 80 mmHg compared with 155 mmHg at sea level

Birds migrate at 6,000 m Humans

Short-term response: Increase in depth of respiration (not rate), regulated by pH of CSF

Long-term response: Increase in erythropoietin and RBC count

Page 18: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Extremes of respiration 2. Diving in air-breathing animals

e.g.reptiles, mammals

Page 19: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Extremes of respiration 2. Diving

Cope with hypoxia by using all available oxygen High levels of Hb, myoglobin Blood shunt to brain and heart

Page 20: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Extremes of respiration Preventing “the bends”

Nitrogen narcosis caused by an increase in pressure

Page 21: Comparative Vertebrate Physiology Vertebrate Respiration Systems.

Extremes of respiration Solution: evacuate lungs of air