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level: Ventilation in fish and insects

Questions and Answers List

level questions: Ventilation in fish and insects

QuestionAnswer
How have fish adapted to low concentration of oxygen in water- each gill is made of lots of thin branches called gill filaments or primary lamellae, which give a big surface area for exchange of gases - the gill filaments are covered with lots of tiny structures called gill plates or secondary lamellae, which increases the surface area more - the gill plates have lots of blood capillaries and a thin surface layer of cells to speed up diffusion
Explain counter current system- blood flows through the gill plates in one direction and the water flows over in the opposite direction - this maintains a large concentration gradient between water and the blood - the concentration of oxygen in the water is always higher than in the blood, so as much oxygen as possible diffuses from the water into the blood
Explain ventilation in fish- fish opens its mouth, which lowers the floor of the buccal cavity - the volume of the cavity increases, decreasing the pressure inside it - water is then sucked into the cavity - when the fish closes its mouth, the floor of the buccal cavity is raised again - volume inside decreases, pressure increases, and water is forced out of the gill filaments
What is the operculum- it is a bony flap that covers each gill filament protecting it - the increase in pressure forces the operculum on each side of the head to open, allowing water to leave the gills
Explain ventilation in insects- they have microscopic are filled pipes called trachea - air moves into the trachea through pores on the insect's surface called spiracles