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Vertebrate Respiratory Anatomy Notes

This document provides an overview of the respiratory system in vertebrates. It describes the primary organs of external respiration as lungs, gills, swim bladders, or skin. It then discusses various respiratory organs in more detail, including gills in cartilaginous fishes and bony fishes, larval gills, swim bladders, and lungs along with associated structures like the larynx, trachea, and syrinx. For each major group of vertebrates, it outlines key features of their lung anatomy, such as the simple sacs of amphibians, septate lungs of reptiles, air sac distribution in birds, and lobed, gas-exchanging structure of mammalian lungs.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views13 pages

Vertebrate Respiratory Anatomy Notes

This document provides an overview of the respiratory system in vertebrates. It describes the primary organs of external respiration as lungs, gills, swim bladders, or skin. It then discusses various respiratory organs in more detail, including gills in cartilaginous fishes and bony fishes, larval gills, swim bladders, and lungs along with associated structures like the larynx, trachea, and syrinx. For each major group of vertebrates, it outlines key features of their lung anatomy, such as the simple sacs of amphibians, septate lungs of reptiles, air sac distribution in birds, and lobed, gas-exchanging structure of mammalian lungs.

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BIO 342

Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy


Lecture Notes - Respiratory System
Respiration is the process of obtaining oxygen from the external environment &
eliminating CO2.
External respiration - oxygen and carbon dioxide exchanged between the
external environment & the body cells
Internal respiration - cells use oxygen for ATP production (& produce carbon
dioxide in the process)
Adaptations for external respiration:
1 - Primary organs in adult vertebrates are external & internal gills, swim bladders
or lungs, skin, & the buccopharyngeal mucosa
2 - Less common respiratory devices include filamentous outgrowths of the
posterior trunk & thigh (African hairy frog), lining of the cloaca, & lining of
esophagus

Respiratory organs:
Cutaneous respiration
o respiration through the skin can take place in air, water, or both
o most important among amphibians (especially the family
Plethodontidae)
Gills (see Respiration in Fishes)
o Cartilaginous fishes:
5 naked gill slits
Anterior & posterior walls of the 1st 4 gill chambers have a gill
surface (demibranch). Posterior wall of last (5th) chamber has no
demibranch.
Interbranchial septum lies between 2 demibranchs of a gill arch

Gill rakers protrude from gill cartilage & guard entrance into gill
chamber
2 demibranchs + septum & associated cartilage, blood vessels,
muscles, & nerves = holobranch

o Bony fishes (teleosts):

(See 'Ventilation in Teleost Fishes')

usually have 5 gill slits

operculum projects backward over gill chambers


interbranchial septa are very short or absent
o Agnathans:
6 - 15 pairs of gill pouches
pouches connected to pharynx by afferent branchial (or gill) ducts
& to exterior by efferent branchial (or gill) ducts

Larval gills:
o External gills
outgrowths from the external surface of 1 or more gill arches
found in lungfish & amphibians
o Filamentous extensions of internal gills
project through gill slits

occur in early stages of development of elasmobranchs


o Internal gills - hidden behind larval operculum of late anuran tadpoles

Swim bladder & origin of lungs - most vertebrates develop an outpocketing of


pharynx or esophagus that becomes one or a pair of sacs (swim bladders or lungs)
filled with gases derived directly or indirectly from the atmosphere. Similarities
between swim bladders & lungs indicate they are the same organs.
Vertebrates without swim bladders or lungs include cyclostomes, cartilaginous fish,
and a few teleosts (e.g., flounders and other bottom-dwellers).

Swim bladders:
may be paired or unpaired (see diagram above)

have, during development, a pneumatic duct that usually connects to the


esophagus. The duct remains open (physostomous) in bowfins and lungfish, but
closes off (physoclistous) in most teleosts.
serve primarily as a hydrostatic organ (regulating a fish's specific gravity)
gain gas by way of a 'red body' (or red gland); gas is resorbed via the oval body
on posterior part of bladder

may also play important roles in:


o hearing - some freshwater teleosts (e.g., catfish, goldfish, & carp) 'hear'
by way of pressure waves transmitted via the swim bladder and small
bones called Weberian ossicles (see diagram below)
o sound production - muscles attached to the swim bladder contract to
move air between 'sub-chambers' of the bladder. The resulting vibration
creates sound in fish such as croakers,grunters, & midshipman fish.
o respiration - the swim bladder of lungfish has number subdivisions or
septa (to increase surface area) & oxygen and carbon dioxide is
exchanged between the bladder & the blood

Source: http://www.notcatfish.com/ichthyology/weberian_apperatus.htm

Lungs & associated structures


Larynx
o Tetrapods besides mammals - 2 pair of cartilages: artytenoid & cricoid
o Mammals - paired arytenoids + cricoid + thyroid + several other small
cartilages including the epiglottis (closes glottis when swallowing)
o Amphibians, some lizards, & most mammals - also have vocal cords
stretched across the laryngeal chamber

Source: http://www.worldzone.net/music/singingvoice/images/glottis.gif

Trachea & syrinx


o Trachea
usually about as long as a vertebrates neck (except in a few birds
such as cranes)
reinforced by cartilaginous rings (or c-rings)
splits into 2 primary bronchi &, in birds only, forms the syrinx at
that point

Lungs
o Amphibian lungs
2 simple sacs
internal lining may be smooth or have simple sacculations or
pockets
air exchanged via positive-pressure ventilation

o Reptilian lungs
simple sacs in Sphenodon & snakes
Lizards, crocodilians, & turtles - lining is septate, with lots of
chambers & subchambers
air exchanged via positive-pressure ventilation

o Avian lungs - modified from those of reptiles:


air sacs (diverticula of lungs) extensively distributed throughout
most of the body
arrangement of air ducts in lungs ----> no passageway is a deadend
air flow through lungs (parabronchi) is unidirectional

o Mammalian lungs:
multichambered & usually divided into lobes
air flow is bidirectional:
Trachea <---> primary bronchi <---> secondary bronchi <---> tertiary bronchi <--->
bronchioles <---> alveoli

air exchanged via negative pressure ventilation, with pressures


changing due to contraction & relaxation of diaphragm &
intercostal muscles

Related links:
Chordate Respiratory Organs and Functions

Back to BIO 342 syllabus

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