Why fish are better at breathing than you are - Dan Kwartler

521,187 views ・ 2024-07-09

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 2019, Eliud Kipchoge finished a Vienna marathon
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in one hour, 59 minutes, and 40 seconds.
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This staggering time broke the two-hour barrier
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that most runners previously deemed impossible.
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However, some researchers weren't as surprised.
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Recent studies investigating if humans could maintain such a high pace
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for the length of a marathon had found that elite runners
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can take in twice as much oxygen as non-runners.
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And it’s likely that this superhuman ability played a role in Eliud’s victory.
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But when it comes to breathing efficiently,
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not even the best runners in the world can compete with the average fish.
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That’s right— you’re looking at some of the best breathers on Earth;
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which actually makes sense when you consider how little oxygen there is
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in their aquatic environments.
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Fish can breathe in a variety of ways,
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but the most common is through the use of gills.
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These branching organs typically come in four pairs,
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all enclosed in gill chambers.
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These chambers are protected by opercle, or gill covers,
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which are just as essential to underwater breathing as the gills themselves.
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When most fish take a breath,
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they first close these covers and take a gulp of water.
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Then, they open their opercle,
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creating a pressure differential that pulls water through the gills,
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which are composed of thread-like filaments spaced evenly along a gill arch.
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These filaments are covered in countless small blood vessels called capillaries,
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in addition to tiny extensions known as gill lamellae
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which further increase the gill’s surface area.
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When water passes over these capillaries,
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the membrane is thin enough for the fish’s red blood cells
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to pull dissolved oxygen from the water into the bloodstream.
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And just like when we breathe with our lungs,
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this process releases carbon dioxide,
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which passes out into the water through the open gill cover.
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This technique only works underwater—
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on the surface, the pressure differential created by opening and closing gill covers
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isn’t strong enough to pull in sufficient air.
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But under the surface, it’s remarkably efficient.
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Inside the lamellae, blood flows in the opposite direction to the water,
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creating a counter-current system that optimizes gas exchange.
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In fact, gills can absorb roughly 75% of the oxygen passing through them;
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that’s twice the percentage of oxygen our lungs extract from a breath of air.
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Fish also breathe much more frequently than we do.
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The average adult human breathes 12 to 18 times a minute,
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while most fish pull water over their gills
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anywhere from 20 to 80 times a minute.
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Those numbers would raise even a marathoner’s eyebrows.
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Thanks to this fast, frequent, and efficient breathing
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fish process far more oxygen than we do.
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It's also why some species can live at great depths.
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Bodies of water get most of their oxygen from the surface,
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where O2 dissolves into the water and begins circulating.
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But further down, there are oxygen minimum zones,
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with concentrations as low as 0.5 milligrams of oxygen per liter.
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To get the oxygen they need,
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fish living at these depths rely on increased gill ventilation
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and hearts that pump high volumes of oxygenated blood throughout the body.
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Even with these tricks, sometimes there's still not enough oxygen to go around,
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forcing fish to adapt more extreme solutions.
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For example, the Australian lungfish lives in a habitat
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where the water level drops precipitously in August and September,
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making it almost impossible to survive with gills alone.
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Fortunately, these fish have gills and lungs.
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Using their long, thin limbs,
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they can lift their mouths above the surface and take deep breaths of air,
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allowing them to survive out of the water for several days.
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And other species of lungfish can survive above ground even longer
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in cocoons of mud and mucus.
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Fortunately, for most fish these extreme adaptations aren’t necessary.
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After all, 71% of Earth is covered in H2O,
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giving these aquatic animals plenty of room to flaunt their gills’ skills.
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