Fish require a specialised gas exchange surface as they have a smaller surface area to volume ratio, are relatively active and have high metabolic rates making oxygen requirements high, and require a ventilation mechanism to maintain concentration gradients for gas exchange.
water and blood flow in opposite directions across the gill plate, the concentration gradient is maintained and oxygen diffuses into the blood across the entiregillplate.
Amphibia have aquatic tadpoles that have feathery gills, which they don’t ventilate like fish but movement of the gills through water maintains a concentration gradient.
4. so volume increases, pressure decreases 5.water rushes in.
Ventilation in humans – inspiration
External intercostal muscles contract and pull the rib cage up and out.
Outer pleural membrane is pulled out. This reduces pressure in the pleural cavity and the inner pleural membrane is pulled outward.
This pulls on the surface of the lungs and causes an increase in the volume of the alveoli.
Alveolar pressure decreases to below atmospheric pressure and air is drawn into the lungs.
Gas exchange in insects:
Pairs of spiracles on segments of the thorax and abdomen.
These holes lead to tubes called tracheae leading to tracheoles.
Tracheoles enter muscle cells directly. They have fluid at the end for dissolving and diffusion of oxygen.
During flight, when oxygen requirements increase, fluid in tracheoles decreases to shorten diffusion path and whole-body contractions ventilate the tracheal system by speeding up air flow through spiracles.