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Squids are aquatic animals that use gills for respiration. They extract oxygen from water passing over their gills and release carbon dioxide. Squids also have a siphon or funnel through which they can expel water, allowing them to jet-propel through the water.
Squids can get fungal infections, commonly from waterborne pathogens. These infections can affect their skin, gills, or internal organs and may impact their health and behavior. Treatment typically involves antifungal medication or changes in their aquatic environment to minimize fungal growth.
The structure of a squid's gills allows for efficient exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the water and the squid's bloodstream. This enables the squid to extract oxygen from the water for respiration and release carbon dioxide as waste. The gills are highly vascularized and have a large surface area to maximize this gas exchange process.
Both cellular membranes and gills are involved in facilitating the exchange of gases. Cellular membranes in individual cells allow for the diffusion of gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide, while gills in aquatic organisms enable the uptake of oxygen from water and the release of carbon dioxide.
Octopuses have gills, not lungs. They use their gills to extract oxygen from water, allowing them to breathe underwater.
Yes, Squids have gills. They need them to breathe underwater. There's different kinds of squids and therefore different kinds of gills that they have but generally they have a total of 4 gills, 2 on each side. On a sidenote to the previous answer: Squids are NOT fish.
they have lungs or none
Squids obtain oxygen through their specialized gills. Water is taken in through the squid's siphon and pumped over the gills where oxygen is extracted and absorbed into their bloodstream. The gills work in a similar way to the lungs of mammals, allowing squids to extract oxygen from the surrounding water.
Squid breathe through gills. Water flows into the mantle and around the gills, which absorb oxygen from the water and release carbon dioxide.
Squids don't have lungs. They have something that works like gills.
Giant squid, like all other squid, have gills. So they "breathe" from them.
Squids have three hearts. Two of the hearts pump blood to the gills for oxygenation, while the third heart pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of the body.
Squids are aquatic animals that use gills for respiration. They extract oxygen from water passing over their gills and release carbon dioxide. Squids also have a siphon or funnel through which they can expel water, allowing them to jet-propel through the water.
Cnidaria don't have gills or lungs, but they take in oxygen from surrounding water through diffusion.
Diffusion occurs in fish primarily in their gills, where oxygen from water diffuses into the blood and carbon dioxide diffuses out of the blood into the water. This process allows fish to obtain the oxygen they need for respiration and to rid their bodies of waste carbon dioxide.
probably to facilitate diffusion of molecular oxygen from the air into the fish's bloodstream
Squids have three hearts to help pump oxygen-rich blood to their tissues more efficiently. Two of the hearts pump blood to the gills for oxygenation, while the third heart pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of the body. This adaptation helps support their active, fast-swimming lifestyle.