Pulmonary and cutaneous O₂gas exchange: a student laboratory exercise in the frog

Adv Physiol Educ. 2013 Mar;37(1):97-105. doi: 10.1152/advan.00087.2012.

Abstract

Gas exchange in animals is ultimately diffusion based, generally occurring across dedicated respiratory organs. In many aquatic amphibians, however, multiple modes of gas exchange exist, allowing for the partitioning of O2 uptake and CO2 excretion between respiratory organs with different efficiencies. For example, due to the physical properties of O2 being vastly different between air and water phases, the lung and skin play disproportionately important roles in O2 uptake. Many aquatic frogs are renowned for their cutaneous gas exchange capacity, where often the majority of CO2 is excreted across the skin. Furthermore, the roles of these gas exchange organs change with the animal's behavior. Under diving conditions, most of the frog's gas exchange needs must be met by the skin. In this article, we describe an interactive undergraduate laboratory that allows a class of students to share equipment while assessing pulmonary and cutaneous respiration in frogs provided with an air/water choice and under enforced dive conditions. Concepts explored in this laboratory exercise include animal energetics, diving reflex, pulmonary and cutaneous gas exchange processes, diffusion-based gas flux, and O2 debt.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Curriculum*
  • Humans
  • Lung / physiology
  • Oxygen Consumption / physiology*
  • Physiology / education*
  • Pulmonary Gas Exchange / physiology*
  • Rana catesbeiana
  • Rana pipiens
  • Rana temporaria
  • Ranidae
  • Skin Physiological Phenomena*
  • Species Specificity
  • Students*
  • Xenopus laevis