Biology, asked by varunharsh, 1 year ago

gaseous exchange through alveoli.

Answers

Answered by Terry52139
3
the alveoli have very thin walls and they are richly supplied with blood vessels...


oxygen diffuses from the alveoli into the bllod while carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood into the alveoli....


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Answered by Anonymous
0
The surfaces of the alveoli are covered with capillaries. These are narrow blood vessels which are one cell thick. Oxygen is passed from the alveoli into the bloodstream, which then distributes it to cells where it is used to unlock energy from food. The blood carries carbon dioxide, a waste product from the oxygen combusting with food in cells, back to the capillaries, where it goes back through the walls of the alveoli and is breathed out when you exhale, as waste.
Blood flows into the lungs from around the body. It carries carbon dioxide produced by respiration in the cells of the body.
Carbon dioxide passes from the blood into the alveoli. Then it is breathed out of the body.
Oxygen is breathed into the lungs. It dissolves in the water lining of the alveoli. From there, it passes into the blood.
Blood carries oxygen away from the lungs to every cell in the body where it is used for respiration.

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