TOPIC 5: GASEOUS EXCHANGE AND RESPIRATION | BIOLOGY FORM 2
The Concept of Gaseous Exchange
Organs responsible for gaseous exchange in living organisms include the following:
ORGANISM | RESPIRATORY SURFACE |
Amoeba | Cell membrane |
Insects | Tracheal system |
Spider | Book lung |
Fish | Gills |
Plants | Leaves, stems, roots |
Amphibians | Skin, gills and lungs |
Mammals | Lungs |
Birds | Lungs |
reptiles | Lungs |
- They are thin to reduce diffusion distance
- They are moist to dissolve gaseous so that they dissolve and diffuse in solution form
- They are highly braced, folded or flattened in order to increase the surface area for gaseous exchange
- They are close to efficient transport and exchange easily by the cells
- They are well ventilated so that gaseous passes easily
exchange refers to the movement of oxygen and carbon dioxide across the
respiratory surface. Is the process through which respiratory gaseous
are passed through the respiratory surface. Respiratory surface are
specialized organs for gaseous exchange. Gaseous exchange takes place
through a process of diffusion.

- Nose and nasal cavity:It has mucus and hair which trap dust and microorganisms
- Glottis:
It is situated in the epiglottis which closes the trachea during
swallowing to prevent food from entering the respiratory system - Trachea, Bronchus, and Bronchioles:
They have blood vessel which have ring cartilage and mucus which warm
hair and prevent collapse of respiratory track also they trap and fitter
dust and micro organisms - Lungs:They are sponge with air space (alveoli) which is the main organ of mammalian gaseous exchange
- Ribs:They are made up of hard bone tissues which protect the lungs from injury.
- Intercostal muscles:They more antagonistically to allow expansion and relaxation of the thoraic cavity
- Diaphragm:Ā is the muscular sheet of tissue which separate thorax from abdomen
- Alveoli: they are numerous in number; they are moist and thin membranes
- Provide surface area for gaseous exchange
- Reduce distance for diffusion of gaseous
- Enable gaseous to dissolve into solution before diffusing
- Transport oxygen from the alveoli to the tissues and carbon dioxide to the alveoli
- Maintain the shape and avoid collapsing
Gaseous
exchange in mammals happens as a result of inhalation and exhalation.
Inhalation is breathing in air in to the lungs. Exhalation is the
breathing out of air from the lungs. During inhalation the muscle of the
diaphragm contract pulling the diaphragm downwards. As this happens,
the external inter costal muscle contract and pull the rib cage upward
and outwards. This increase volume and decreases pressure in the thorax.
This makes air rush in the lungs.
exhalation the muscles of the diaphragm resumes its dome shape. The
external intercostal muscles relax pulling the rib cage inwards and
downwards. This decreases volume and increases pressure. This forces air
out through the bronchioles, trachea and nostrils
actual exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide takes place in the
alveoli. One mammalian lung has millions of alveoli. When we breathe air
in it accumulates in the alveoli. There is higher concentration of
oxygen in the alveoli than in the blood stream. The oxygen combines with
hemoglobin to form oxy hemoglobin. Oxygen is then transported to the
tissues
The
tissue use oxygen and release carbon dioxide which diffuses in blood
capillaries and combine with hemoglobin to form carbon hemoglobin.
Capillaries transform this form to alveoli as it is then transported
through the bronchioles trachea, glottis, pharynx, and finally nostrils
into the atmosphere.

- Exercise or physical activities
- Age
- Emotions
- Temperature
- Health
- Carbon dioxide concentration
- Hemoglobin concentration
- Altitude
plants gaseous exchange takes place through the stomata on the leaves
and lenticels on the stem. But some plants such as mangrove also carry
out gaseous exchange through breathing roots.
plants gaseous exchange takes place through the stomata on the leaves
and lenticels on the stem. But some plants such as mangrove also carry
out gaseous exchange through breathing roots.
Through stomata, atmospheric air moves in and out of the leaf. Gaseous
exchange mostly takes place in the air spaces in the spongy mesophyll.

During
the day, green plants carry out photosynthesis to produce glucose and
this takes place within the guard cells that surround the stomata then
the cell sap of the guard cells becomes hypertonic and draws in water
from the neighboring cells by osmosis.
guard cells become turgid and the stomata open whereby the air from the
atmosphere such as carbon dioxide enters into the air spaces in the
spongy mesophyll.
is more in the air within the air space but oxygen is less. Then the
carbon dioxide and oxygen diffuse in opposite direction depending on
their concentration gradients (such as oxygen out and carbon dioxide
in). The carbon dioxide diffuses into neighboring cells until it reaches
the site for photosynthesis and oxygen moves out through the open
stomata to the atmosphere.
the night there is no light so that photosynthesis ceases and there is
no production of glucose. Therefore the guard cells do not absorb water
by osmosis hence the stomata remain partially closed.
respiration process takes place at night in plants. The partially open
stomata allow small amount of air to enter and accumulate in the air
spaces. In this case there is more oxygen and less carbon dioxide in the
air spaces compared to plant cells.
moves into the plant cells while carbon dioxide moves into the air
spaces and eventually into the atmosphere through the partially open
stomata. This explains why green plants produce carbon dioxide at night
and oxygen during the day.
Importance of Gaseous Exchange in Plants
Explain the importance of gaseous exchange in plants
- It enables the plants to eliminate excess carbon dioxide at night of which if left will harm the plants
- It enables plants to obtain carbon dioxide which is one of the raw materials necessary for photosynthesis
- Plants obtain oxygen which is necessary for production of energy which is produced during respiration through gaseous exchange
the metabolic activity or reaction in which complex food substances are
broken down step by step to release energy within a cell.
a set of metabolic reaction and process that takes place in the cell of
organisms to convert biochemical energy from nutrients into ATP.
The reaction involved is catabolic reaction, which breaks larger
molecules into smaller ones to release energy. Cellular respiration is
considered as exothermic reaction. Exothermic reaction is the process
whereby energy is released out.
- Aerobic Respiration
- Anaerobic Respiration
The Concept of Aerobic Respiration
Explain the concept of aerobic respiration
is the combustion reaction. This means that oxygen is required in order
to generate ATP. The simplified reaction of respiration of
carbohydrates is C6H12O6.
starts with glucose (usually). In aerobic and anaerobic respiration
initial reactions are common as a result of which pyruvic acid is formed
by breakdown of glucose.
process is called Glycolysis or EMP Pathway (Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas
Pathway). This process does not require O2although this can take place
in the presence of oxygen. After this stage, the fate of pyruvic acid is
different depending upon the presence or absence of oxygen.
oxygen is present there is complete oxidation of pyruvic acid into H2O
and CO2and chemical reactions through which this occurs is called
Tri-Carboxylic Acid cycle (TCA Cycle) or Krebs Cycle. This cycle occurs
in mitochondria. If oxygen is absent, pyruvic acid forms ethyl alcohol
(C2H5OH) and CO2without the help of any cell organelle. This process is
called anaerobic respiration.
by living organisms can be investigated by carrying out experiments to
show the production of carbon dioxide and heat.
milky in the presence of carbon dioxide. It can be used to show that
exhaled air contains more carbon dioxide than inhaled air.
Carbon dioxide dissolves in water to form a weaklyacidicsolution.Hydrogencarbonate indicatoris used to show the presence of carbon dioxide in solution. It is:
- red at neutralpH(no carbon dioxide)
- yellow at low pH (carbon dioxide present)

- one containing living plant material
- one containing dead plant material (thecontrol)
Contents | Start temp (Ā°C) | End temp (Ā°C) | Temp change (Ā°C) |
---|---|---|---|
Living plant material | 21 | 29 | 8 |
Dead plant material | 21 | 21 | 0 |
rate of respiration in organisms is rarely constant. There are several
factors in that affect rate of respiration. These apply equally to
aerobic and anaerobic respiration although the examples given here refer
to aerobic respiration
- Temperature:Respiration
is a chemical process therefore its rate increases with increasing body
temperature as an increasing in temperature increases the rate of
chemical change. - Activity:All body activity
requires energy. When an organism becomes active it requires more energy
than when itās inactive. Since respiration provides energy required for
the activity the rate of respiration will correspondingly increase. - Body Size:Small
organisms have high surface area to volume ratio. Heat loss occurs at
the surface; therefore small organisms tend to lose heat more rapidly
than larger ones. Small animals e.g. shrews, have to maintain higher
rate of respiration than larger ones to maintain their body temperature. - Age:Young
organisms are growing and as a result require more energy than older
mature individual whose growth may slow down or stopped. Younger
individual tend to be more physically active also. Both of these rate
factors lead to increased rates of respiration in younger organism
is the process whereby energy is released in absence of oxygen although
the energy outcome in anaerobic respiration is much less than aerobic
respiration. Anaerobic respiration differs in plant and animal.
- Anaerobic Alcoholic fermentation in plant cell and yeast
- Anaerobic lactic fermentation
- Anaerobic Alcoholic fermentation in plant cell and yeast
- Anaerobic lactic fermentation
- Glucose ā Ethanol + Carbon dioxide + Energy
- C6H12O6Ā ā 2C2H5OH + 2CO2Ā + 2 ATP
- Raw Material ā End Product
- C6H12O6 (Glucose)ā C3H6O3Ā + 2ATP Energy (Lactic Acid)
- Raw Material ā End Product
more common occurrence of lactic acid fermentation is in muscles;
during exercise. During this period the respiratory surface is incapable
of supplying oxygen to the molecule, which is requirement. Hence due to
this lactic acid is produced. Accumulation of lactic acid will cause
muscle cramp and so prevent muscles from operating.
- Ethanol
- Carbon dioxide
- Energy
- Lactic Acid
- Energy (2ATP)
- This
process brings about fermentation. Fermentation occurs when simple
sugar (glucose) is broken down by bacterial in absence of oxygen - Bacteria break down milk sugar to reduce lactic acid
- Production of composite manure
heavy exercise, oxygen supply is less than what is required by the
body. As a result of anaerobic respiration taking place and lactic acid
accumulates. This creates oxygen deficit.
- Alcohol brewing e.g. making beer and wine
- Production of acetic acid and other acid such as citric acid
- Production of biogas from cooking and lighting
- Bread making process
- Production of composite manure
Aerobic Respiration | Anaerobic Respiration |
Oxygen is used up | Oxygen is not used |
Larger amount of energy is released | Less amount of energy is released |
Water molecules are produced | Water molecules are not produced |
Takes place in mitochondria | Takes place in cytoplasm |
Products produced are not harmful | Products produced are harmful example lactic acid |
are several airborne infections, which affect the human respiratory
system. The common ones are influenza, pneumonia, common cold and
tuberculosis.
of the airborne infections are a result of close contact with an
infected person. When the sick person breathes out, coughs or sneezes,
the pathogens are released into the air.
infections can be controlled by isolation of the infected patients,
proper disposal of infected secretion such as sputum, living in a
well-ventilated house and avoiding overcrowding especially in bedrooms.
infections can be controlled by isolation of the infected patients,
proper disposal of infected secretion such as sputum, living in a
well-ventilated house and avoiding overcrowding especially in bedrooms.
- PNEUMONIA
- BRONCHITIS
- ASTHMA
- LUNG CANCER
- EMPHYSEMA
- TUBERCULOSIS
is inflammation of the lung. It is caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi
or by inhaling chemical toxins or irritants. Pneumonia is normally
followed by other illnesses such as cold or flu.
- Fever
- Chills
- Shortness of breath associated with pain
- Increase of mucus production
- Cough
- Staying warm
- Avoiding overcrowded areas
- Avoiding cold food and drinks, hot drinks are preferred more as they loosen secretions
- Get treatment as early as possible since it is curable by antibiotics
viruses and inhaling of irritating substances can cause the lining of
the respiratory system to become inflamed. This causes an infection
called bronchitis. Bronchitis can be acute or chronic.
- Pain in the chest
- Rapid breathing
- Fever
- Coughing
- Headache
- Coughing with the production of thick sputum
- Breathing difficulties
- Avoiding smoking
- Avoid very smoky or dusty areas
- Live in a well-ventilated house
- Keep your body warm
- Seek medical help
is characterized by inflamed and constricted airways. The narrowing of
the airways restricts the flow of air into the lungs.
- Allergic reactions to dust, pollen, spores or animal fur
- Herediroty diseases of the respiratory system
- Extremely cold weather
- Frequent viral or bacteria lung infection
- Narrowing of bronchioles resulting in breathing difficulties and a wheezing or hissing sound when breathing
- Coughing
- Shortness of breath
- Excessive production of mucus
- Dilation of blood vessels leading to low blood pressure, low blood pressure can be fatal
- Chest tightness
- Avoid allergens (things that cause allergenic reaction)
- Get treatment for respiratory infections as early as possible
- Keep the body warm
- Muscle relaxants in the form of sprays, pills and injections are used to prevent the narrowing of bronchitis
main cause of lung cancer is smoking. The nicotine in cigarette smoke
stops the cilia in the trachea from expelling foreign materials leading
to respiratory infection.
- Chest pain
- Breathing difficulty
- Weight Loss
- Persistent Cough
- Abnormal Production of Mucus
- Stop smoking
- There is no cure for cancer. However chemotherapy and physiotherapy are used to control the disease
is a lung disease, which results from destruction of the structure
supporting the alveoli leading to these collapse. This significantly
reduces the surface area available for gaseous exchange.
- Mainly cigarette smoke
- Air pollution
- Hereditary
- Old age
- Shortness of breath
- Coughing
- Obstructive lung disease
- Difficulties when breathing especially during exercise
- Wheezing during breathing
- Avoid cigarette smoking and exposure to smoke
- Lung surgery is usually done to relieve the symptoms
- Use of medical drugs
- In severe cases, lung transplant is necessary
is highly infections disease. The causal organism for TB is one of the
strains of bacteria belonging to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Tuberculosis can be spread from one person to another person, when the
bacteria become airborne.
- Cough
- Fever
- Weight Loss
- Loss of appetite
Disorders of the Respiratory System and HIV/AIDS
Relate disorders of the respiratory system and HIV/AIDS
is the most common opportunistic infection associated with HIV
worldwide. Tuberculosis is an infection by the tuberculosis bacterium
that predominantly affects the lungs, but it can spread through the
blood and lymph nodes to the rest of the body in people with HIV.
disease can strike people with HIV no matter what the level of the CD4
count, which means that TB can often occur years before other problems
associated with HIV develop.
is the most common opportunistic infection that occurs with AIDS the
fungus that causes the PCP infection is spread through breathing or
coughing. Symptoms include cough, fever, trouble breathing and loss of
weight.
is caused by fungus and it is the most common central nervous system
infection associated with HIV. Meningitis is an inflammation of the
membranes and fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord.
Activity 1
Suggest other ways of preventing and controlling disorders of the respiratory system.
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