Module 3: Mammalian Ventilation

These free OCR A Level Biology Mammalian Ventilation revision notes have been written for specification points 3.1.1(c), 3.1.1(d) and 3.1.1(e).

Ventilation (Breathing) In Mammals

Ventilation enables the effective exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the alveoli by taking in oxygen and removing waste carbon dioxide; this maintains a concentration gradient to maximise diffusion.

The table below compares the events of inhalation and exhalation:

StepInhalationExhalation
1The diaphragm contracts and flattensDiaphragm relaxes: returns to a dome shape
2External intercostal muscles contract, pulling the ribs up and outExternal intercostal muscles relax, allowing ribs to move down and in
3The thoracic cavity volume increasesThe thoracic cavity volume decreases
4Pulmonary lung pressure decreases below atmospheric pressure (negative pressure)Pulmonary lung pressure increases above atmospheric pressure (positive pressure)
5Air flows into the lungs down the pressure gradientAir flows out of the lungs down the pressure gradient
(Forced only)Internal intercostal muscles relax (inactive during normal inhalation)Internal intercostal muscles contract (during forced exhalation), pulling ribs down and in further, decreasing thoracic volume more rapidly

Forced inhalation and forced exhalation are active breathing processes involving additional muscle groups beyond those used in normal, quiet breathing, such as during exercise, singing or coughing.

The table below outlines the key changes which occur during inhalation and exhalation:

ChangeInhalationExhalation
DiaphragmContractsRelaxes
External intercostalsContractRelax
Internal intercostalsRelax (inactive)Contract (when forced)
Thoracic volumeIncreasesDecreases
Pulmonary pressureDecreases (below atmospheric)Increases (above atmospheric)
Air movementInto lungsOut of lungs

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