Tiscali Quicklinks. Please visit our Accessibility Page for a list of the Access Keys you can use to find your way around the site, skip directly to the main navigation, to the page content, or to more links within reference.

It is a characteristic of living organisms that they exchange materials with the environment. As well as the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide during aerobic respiration, nutrients must be taken up from the environment to feed the organism. In humans, these include carbohydrates, proteins, minerals (see mineral salts), and vitamins. Water is another important substance that has to be absorbed. However, in plants, only carbon dioxide, water, and minerals are required. The carbon dioxide is used in photosynthesis, which then releases oxygen as a waste product. All oxygen gas in the air on Earth is believed to have been produced by photosynthesis.
Specialized respiratory surfaces have evolved during evolution to make gas exchange more efficient. In humans and other tetrapods (four-limbed vertebrates), gas exchange occurs in the lungs, aided by the breathing movements of the ribs. Many adult amphibia and terrestrial invertebrates can absorb oxygen directly through the skin. The bodies of insects and some spiders contain a system of air-filled tubes known as tracheae. Fish have gills as their main respiratory surface. In plants, gas exchange generally takes place via the stomata and the air-filled spaces between the cells in the interior of the leaf.
The distinctive pattern in the hoist is designed to look like woven cloth. Effective date: 7 June 1995.
>>