The Avian Respiratory System

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 211

  • @rosetyler1434
    @rosetyler1434 4 года назад +204

    Thank you, this helped me to explain properly to my roommate exactly why smoking around a bird is a horrible thing to do- worse to do to them than it would be to do to another animal since they keep the air inside for longer and pass it through the lungs twice, and thus end up absorbing more toxins

    • @mitchspurlock3626
      @mitchspurlock3626 2 года назад +29

      it doesn't pass through the lungs twice it goes through once, the air sacs enable the air to flow through in only one direction which makes it so efficient

    • @RaisonDetre96
      @RaisonDetre96 2 года назад +5

      Mitch Spurlock Ok, but is the first half of his statement true? That the air spends more time inside their bodies than that of a mammal?

    • @mitchspurlock3626
      @mitchspurlock3626 2 года назад +26

      @@RaisonDetre96 Nope, it spends a similar amount of time or less in the lungs than it does us, but their breathing is more efficient and that is why it's more dangerous. They extract more from the air into their bloodstream than we do.

    • @RaisonDetre96
      @RaisonDetre96 2 года назад +4

      Mitch Spurlock Ah very interesting, thank you.

    • @mhdfrb9971
      @mhdfrb9971 2 года назад

      @@mitchspurlock3626 so it's not really efficient

  • @kennethferland5579
    @kennethferland5579 8 лет назад +219

    Bats demonstrate that flight is not impossible without avian respiration, but it is likely limited in duration and altitude.

    • @pokoirlyase5931
      @pokoirlyase5931 5 лет назад +27

      There is a reason why bats don't have migration, for example, so you are right. Bat flight is very limited and inefficient. Compared to birds at least. But this air sac system didn't evolve for flight, it evolved originally to make saurischian and theropod dinosaurs lighter, and later was used by birds as a flight system.

    • @justanotherhunter6634
      @justanotherhunter6634 4 года назад +37

      @@pokoirlyase5931 if i may just criticize your comment, you're incorrect about bat migration. Several species of bat have been observed migrating en mass, for instance the mexican free tail, or the hoary bat, they migrate from the midwest down to the southern US when the weather turns colder, they do indeed migrate.

    • @rafiqqasim547
      @rafiqqasim547 4 года назад +11

      @@peternewbranch9263 New Zealand has 2 species of bat and is over 1,000 miles away from the nearest large landmass; your argument is invalid.

    • @u235u235u235
      @u235u235u235 4 года назад

      @@pokoirlyase5931 i thought only the top of the dinosaur lighter to give lower center of gravity for improved turning without falling over?

    • @filiphabek271
      @filiphabek271 4 года назад +3

      @@rafiqqasim547 Continent forming and separation eksplains that, every continent in the world was once part of Pangea during first two thirds of Mesozoic. His comment is valid.

  • @breannawidner8487
    @breannawidner8487 3 года назад +27

    their anatomy is just so interesting and unique

  • @padmajaofficial5863
    @padmajaofficial5863 5 лет назад +22

    Today I saw so many migratory birds and dolphins too, I am going to mention some of the birds:
    Little Cormorant
    Large Cormorant
    Bar headed Goose
    Grey Heron
    Greenshank
    Redshank
    Greater Adjutant ( Garur)
    Black necked Stork
    Black kites and many more

  • @derpypigeon
    @derpypigeon 6 лет назад +60

    Wow
    I don’t think my dream of being a bird is going anywhere

  • @EmelieRosendalAlamo
    @EmelieRosendalAlamo 11 месяцев назад +3

    I have a question, when they do the 2nd inhalation and the air goes in to the anterior sacs, does new air go in posterior sacs?

    • @colingtaylor2158
      @colingtaylor2158 11 месяцев назад +1

      At last, a good question! There is only one inhalation, the air goes through the lungs into both anterior air-sacs and posterior air-sacs, simultaneously. During exhalation, the air leaves both/all air-sacs through the lungs a second time. (I think).

  • @Wienke-schimm
    @Wienke-schimm 2 месяца назад +1

    I've read several explanations of bird respiration, and this was the first time it began to make sense. I made a diagram so I could track what was happening in the overlapping cycles. It seems that during exhalation, both batches of air move forward, whereas during inhalation they move in opposite directions. I'm puzzled how the old air is forced forward out of the parabronchi in the lungs during inhalation. Since the lungs are rigid, I assume it is simply the pressure of the new air moving forward from the posterior air sacs.

  • @StephenGillie
    @StephenGillie 5 лет назад +27

    Birds got lungs like bagpipes.

    • @lanietalk
      @lanietalk 3 года назад

      swan song. when they die and air leaves their lungs

    • @yeetusdeletus4239
      @yeetusdeletus4239 25 дней назад

      @@lanietalk mildly disturbing but ok

  • @arielshikoba1857
    @arielshikoba1857 5 лет назад +33

    Backwards Breathing 😏
    Birds: Inhale >Air leaves
    Birds: Exhale

    • @arendellecitizen208
      @arendellecitizen208 2 года назад +5

      Dr. Bird: inhale
      Me: **inhales**
      Dr. Bird: now inhale again but the other way
      Me: **confused, dying of asphyxiation**

  • @IowaKim
    @IowaKim 3 года назад +14

    So birds are a 4 stroke engine. Interesting.

  • @leporellothegoldfinch
    @leporellothegoldfinch 3 года назад +9

    What an amazing explanation. Thank you so much!

  • @jonmarkwilson
    @jonmarkwilson 9 лет назад +5

    Excellent video! One minor point to correct, birds have the most efficient respiratory system of any terrestrial vertebrate. Fishes win that one.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 9 лет назад

      Jonathan Wilson Human lungs have the surface area of a tennis court. Fishes don't come close to that as they need to keep their gills exposed, and swimming around with court sized organs hanging out wouldn't be very sensible.

    • @danielcrubaugh9924
      @danielcrubaugh9924 9 лет назад +7

      Jonathan Wilson Terrestrial means earth, that means that terrestrial only applies to animals that are land dwelling, fishes qualify as aquatic and not terrestrial

    • @jonasawi
      @jonasawi 9 лет назад +7

      +Patrick McCurry Sure, we've got large lungs, but not efficient lungs. We extract about 20-25% oxygen from the air we breathe while fish extract 80-90%, so they are by far more efficient.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 9 лет назад +2

      jonasawi Fish extract 80%+ of the oxygen from the air they breathe?

    • @jonasawi
      @jonasawi 9 лет назад +3

      +Patrick McCurry I didn't say air, did I? They extract 80-90% of the oxygen available to them because they use a counter-current system. You could simply say "OK, fair" rather than prove to me that you're dumb. The fact that you don't understand what "efficient" means already told me as much so there's no reason to drive the point home.

  • @ericschmidt6129
    @ericschmidt6129 6 дней назад

    Thank you for the great explanation of avian respiration.

  • @notfunnybbg
    @notfunnybbg 2 года назад +3

    Tyy! i did not understand what i was studying but this really helped me

  • @MrTwostring
    @MrTwostring 10 лет назад +8

    Enjoyed the video. My one observation is that it's not clear that the avian respiratory system is related to flight. There's evidence that flightless dinosaurs had a similar system, and in any event, bats have a mammalian lung and yet can fly just fine.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 9 лет назад +4

      MrTwostring They can't fly at altitude and they're locking into a much smaller maximum size than birds. At least bats have proper lungs unlike really small insects.

    • @MrTwostring
      @MrTwostring 9 лет назад +2

      Patrick McCurry Flightless dinosaurs can't fly at altitude either.

    • @juliafraa6419
      @juliafraa6419 2 года назад +1

      Back in that time there was much less oxygen in the air than there is today so that is why this feature originally came about but now it continues to exist in birds probably so they can fly at such high altitudes and for such long distances

    • @MrTwostring
      @MrTwostring 2 года назад

      @@juliafraa6419 - I don't buy it. EVERY animal alive today is descended from an animal that was alive then.
      Either way - I think you have it backwards. Here's a random bit found from a quick google search.
      - - - - -
      The atmosphere of the Earth 80 million years ago was discovered to have 50% more oxygen than modern air. Brenner and Landis found that for all gas samples taken from amber 80 million years old the oxygen content ranged between 25% to 35% and averaged about 30% oxygen. Cretaceous air was supercharged with oxygen.

    • @isspenguin
      @isspenguin 10 месяцев назад

      @MrTwostring: Atmospheric oxygen levels fell from a high point of 28% in the Late Permian to 20% at the PTB, and 16% in the Early Triassic

  • @pabs04
    @pabs04 11 лет назад +41

    Great video, just one comment. At the beginning you state that the avian respiratory system is the most efficient in the animal kingdom. That is incorrect. The most efficient respiratory system is the countercurrent respiratory system found in fish. They are able to exchange at an efficiency ration of 80-90%. Avians have a cross-current system, and while efficiency is superior to that of humans, it still falls short of the fish.
    But again, great video!

    • @spacecadet28
      @spacecadet28 4 года назад +3

      fish dont breathe air.

    • @EjPwned
      @EjPwned 3 года назад +3

      It’s the most efficient in air breathing vertebrates

  • @hebamostafa8805
    @hebamostafa8805 2 года назад

    what the function of air sac in the embryonic life

  • @happymevids
    @happymevids 5 лет назад +13

    Does that [lack of diaphragm] mean that broken ribs are more likely to be fatal in birds? Brilliant video xx

    • @hellomark1
      @hellomark1 Год назад +5

      I mean, everything is more fatal for birds, so probably :) they have very few redundant organs, they're just built to be light and fast, so they sacrifice a lot of other things.

  • @pool8157
    @pool8157 7 лет назад +1

    Such a unique and simple way of explaining.....thanks

  • @MrJames1041
    @MrJames1041 4 года назад +2

    I have a question.
    You stated that 'Cervical Air Sacs' are the ones that are in the cranial region of the thoracic but in 2:50 you labeled them as 'Anterior Air Sacs'.
    It's a bit confusing.. Could you help me out?

  • @OttomanZC
    @OttomanZC 8 лет назад +1

    I don't get it. What's the advantage of this system? A constant air flow? But I can't see the constant air flow, the lungs only get air when the abdominal sacs are emptied?

    • @lifegaurdmuaythai95
      @lifegaurdmuaythai95 8 лет назад +1

      yeah, just to ensure a constant air flow. Because the birds are having to work so hard to stay in the air they need to make sure they have 'secondary tanks' that are used whilst the air in the lungs are being used. Its just to make sure the bird always has air.

    • @OttomanZC
      @OttomanZC 8 лет назад +1

      Dale Kingston Oh ok thanks for your help!

  • @noelchignell1048
    @noelchignell1048 7 дней назад

    Fastest flying creature in level flight is the Brazilian free-tailed bat which can fly at 160 km/h (100 mph) so I guess the avian respiratory system isn't absolutely necessary for flight. Also insects have extremely crude respiratory systems and yet they manage to fly okay

  • @Termini_Man
    @Termini_Man 7 месяцев назад

    I'm surprised, I would have thought that birds would have 2 tubes, one where the air comes in through, and one where it exits through.

  • @IanThompson1
    @IanThompson1 10 лет назад +20

    That was brilliant, very helpful. Just to point out that bats use a conventional mammalian lung and fly remarkably well (migrating long distances, but not at altitude). Curious that birds have such a complex system when a straightforward in out lung would have 'got them off the ground'(!)

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 9 лет назад +19

      Ian Thompson One theory is that proto-dinosaurs evolved them to deal with the major drop in oxygen after the Permian Triassic extinction when 96% of all marine life died out. That it later turned out perfect for flight was just a lucky coincidence.

    • @Zache9110
      @Zache9110 5 лет назад +1

      @@patrickmccurry1563 That would be a great example of an exaptation!

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +2

      @@patrickmccurry1563 Pretty much how evolution goes at things. Have something with a minor advantage, improve and build on that, then find another function for it. Feathers pretty much for thermal insulation and courtship before being used for gliding and finally flight.

    • @Benjaminbumblebee
      @Benjaminbumblebee Год назад +2

      God designed and created these systems. The design speaks of this itself.

    • @dolsopolar
      @dolsopolar Год назад

      @@patrickmccurry1563archosaurs evolved them long before that as pterosaurs, another archosaur achieved flight before end triassic. so that wouldn't really be the case since other large archosaurs with the same system as dinosaurs went extinct.

  • @joshhattig9427
    @joshhattig9427 3 года назад

    also are we t
    are we
    talking about air going into the bird or the birds respiratory system

  • @DanteYewToob
    @DanteYewToob 11 месяцев назад +1

    I still don’t understand how/where the air flows through the bones… but this is really cool and interesting!

    • @PaulG.x
      @PaulG.x 10 дней назад

      The larger bones are just extra air sacs

  • @Broockle
    @Broockle 15 дней назад

    Just found out about this today.
    This is how birds get air at such high altitudes. To think Dinosaurs must have had a similar design.

  • @alfarosiarsita
    @alfarosiarsita 3 года назад +3

    If human lung is a Piston engine, bird lung is Rotary engine

  • @wishby6441
    @wishby6441 6 лет назад +2

    Incredibly helpful video for explaining how the system works!

  • @nayabbirds721
    @nayabbirds721 3 года назад

    And its treatment?

  • @peppermintcactus8018
    @peppermintcactus8018 5 лет назад +2

    What would that feel like? Human breathing seems a lot more simple to describe. Would it feel any different if a human were able to do this, if they described it to someone?

    • @indrajeet
      @indrajeet 5 лет назад +2

      Our breathing would be allot more efficient, since we would be able to absorb 90% of the owygen we breath in. We would have a llot more energy potential, speed, stamina, power e.t.c.

    • @BerryTheBnnuy
      @BerryTheBnnuy 3 года назад +3

      @@indrajeet We'd actually be more efficient than birds if we breathed like this. Our red blood cells are a lot smaller than that of birds. So if we had the avian respiratory system, we'd be even more over powered than we already are.

    • @juritudi57yearsago59
      @juritudi57yearsago59 Год назад +2

      @@BerryTheBnnuy if we had avian respiration however, we’d be getting infections and respiratory diseases from smoke and air pollutants even cleaning products much more than if we had mammalian respiration. It has a drawback because of how efficient it at utilizing oxygen.

    • @barbarakrall4331
      @barbarakrall4331 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@juritudi57yearsago59 Exactly! Any experienced bird owner understands that avian pets are FAR more sensitive to indoor air pollutants and airborne toxins than are mammalian pets and have to take great care to avoid exposing their birds to such toxins. Newbie bird owners, unless they have exerted the effort to learn in advance why birds' respiratory systems are so sensitive, may learn from the school of hard knocks when their bird suddenly drops dead.

  • @basennel
    @basennel 6 лет назад +1

    Great and interesting video!!! Thank you for sharing.

  • @Deeer69420
    @Deeer69420 2 года назад

    This is great! Exactly what I was looking for!

  • @rebeccacurran8365
    @rebeccacurran8365 2 года назад +1

    Very clearly explained!

  • @linearOffBurleigh
    @linearOffBurleigh 2 года назад

    Birds swim through air osmotically?

  • @MsMauDau
    @MsMauDau 2 года назад +1

    thank you , very clear explanation. really helps!

  • @YunyunFeng-y7d
    @YunyunFeng-y7d Месяц назад

    Sorry, I didn't catch that. Within the lungs the air passes through "what"?(about 2:28)

    • @IroVinh
      @IroVinh Месяц назад

      *Parabronchi*

  • @timone1002
    @timone1002 7 лет назад +9

    So are they 2 stroke or 4 stroke?

    • @heytasker
      @heytasker 6 лет назад +3

      timone1002 you're thinking of chicken... you don't stroke chicken, you choke it..
      🤣

    • @youssifkabaili5263
      @youssifkabaili5263 5 лет назад

      Are you sure

    • @MoisesQuirozT
      @MoisesQuirozT 4 года назад +1

      More like axial flow turbine LOL

  • @biancazaffarano81
    @biancazaffarano81 3 года назад

    Kelly have emailed you to ask permission to use with attribution. Please let me know.

  • @sofiehenrysonrudvall
    @sofiehenrysonrudvall 4 года назад +2

    Hello Kelly ! We have seen your movie about birds breething and we think it is very good. Is it possible to show this movie in an exhibition about birds? This exhibition will open 19TH of September 2020, in about five weeks in Uddevalla, Sweden. We need to translate the movie.

  • @Hun_Uinaq
    @Hun_Uinaq 2 года назад +2

    I don’t think this adaptation is that crucial in order to fly. Bats don’t have it and manage to fly pretty well. I’m sure it helps enormously though.

  • @anitacoogan4822
    @anitacoogan4822 2 года назад +2

    thank you, often when I find the injured birds they are gasping for air ( and unfortunately spasms) they hit the glass building hard and fall many flors to the hard cement, I flip them as quick as I can off their backs on to their belly as often see perished on their backs. A friend & I rescue birds . A recent youtube video shows us in Newark NJ, the video is named
    ( Volunteers give migrating birds injured in N.J’s biggest city a second chance ) The Raptor Trust made a older video when we first started named
    ( Window Strikes in the Business District ) of us picking up injured Warblers.

    • @laracorbo2192
      @laracorbo2192 2 месяца назад +1

      you can put stickers on the windows so they dont crash!

    • @anitacoogan4822
      @anitacoogan4822 2 месяца назад

      @@laracorbo2192 These are office buildings, I suggested but they will not do this small thing. But it is an excellent suggestion

  • @tobiaschaparro2372
    @tobiaschaparro2372 17 дней назад

    If it's so important for flight, then what kind of lungs do bats have?

    • @PaulG.x
      @PaulG.x 10 дней назад

      Ordinary , but larger , mammalian lungs. Bats have all excess weight reduced as much as possible.
      For example: the reason they hang is because their legs are reduced in muscle and bone mass to the point that they are not able to stand.
      Bats are also limited to around 1 kg total mass . Any larger and they can not get enough oxygen to fly.

  • @TheGabXD
    @TheGabXD 9 лет назад +8

    wow amazing video. Thank you so much!!!

  • @SuriyaKsr
    @SuriyaKsr 11 месяцев назад

    Good explanation 🎉

  • @vishwagoal492
    @vishwagoal492 5 лет назад

    How many tracheal ring in birds??

  • @mahamaha-lr4xy
    @mahamaha-lr4xy 8 лет назад +3

    simple easy and good explanation

  • @PlainsPup
    @PlainsPup 25 дней назад

    Well, flight is not “impossible” without the avian respiratory system; bats and insects have powered flight, too.

  • @UkeGirl100
    @UkeGirl100 10 лет назад +1

    TRULY informative!!!

    • @a-splays4419
      @a-splays4419 2 года назад

      You posted 7 years ago , how's your life now?

  • @sturlamolden
    @sturlamolden 7 лет назад +2

    You forgot an important part of the bird respiratory system, the pneumatic bones in the skeleton.

  • @SassePhoto
    @SassePhoto 3 года назад

    Excellent thank you so much

  • @ParhoLikhoAgayBhado
    @ParhoLikhoAgayBhado 9 лет назад +3

    superb...

  • @T-She-Go
    @T-She-Go 7 лет назад +2

    You're a blessing, thank you :)

  • @Dawer8D
    @Dawer8D 6 лет назад

    gracias señorita

  • @kashyapprajapati8490
    @kashyapprajapati8490 3 года назад

    Interesting the bird lung study

  • @zhilahesani8384
    @zhilahesani8384 9 лет назад

    do negative pressure in respiratory system of birds?

  • @studiojox
    @studiojox 4 года назад

    Hi could We use, show this video in our exhibitatin at a small museum in Sweden?

  • @kelseycee
    @kelseycee 11 лет назад +3

    great video, but you misspelled metabolic at the beginning of the video

  • @ryoumaf3250
    @ryoumaf3250 6 лет назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @passivemoon
    @passivemoon 3 года назад

    Thank you.

  • @TragoudistrosMPH
    @TragoudistrosMPH 6 лет назад

    So many questions... what about crocodiles and bats?

  • @asgwilson
    @asgwilson 10 лет назад +3

    Excellent!!

  • @cristinabesenmuelas7009
    @cristinabesenmuelas7009 4 года назад

    Hi! Me and my friend are doing a science work and we need to know if you are a teacher or similar and if it is yes, what institution. Good job with the video by the way!

  • @jessicalv6442
    @jessicalv6442 Год назад

    Very helpful!!

  • @user-cl3gz9ey1w
    @user-cl3gz9ey1w 5 лет назад

    Can you make playlist for bird in your channel please

  • @Arjun08ac
    @Arjun08ac 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks

  • @אבי-ו9ז
    @אבי-ו9ז Год назад

    תודה רבה

  • @youssifkabaili5263
    @youssifkabaili5263 5 лет назад +3

    I’m gonna see the birds breathing air.

  • @dhadham9135
    @dhadham9135 8 лет назад

    Thank you

  • @melinafava4943
    @melinafava4943 10 лет назад +1

    Thank you ! Help alot ! :D

  • @alonir101
    @alonir101 9 лет назад +1

    Cool video thanks :D

  • @benitomussolini-x
    @benitomussolini-x 7 лет назад

    Been superbly understood..

  • @gluestick4833
    @gluestick4833 4 года назад

    Thanks
    This video was helpful

  • @PaulG.x
    @PaulG.x 10 дней назад

    We bats would beg to differ on the last point 🦇

  • @القرآنُكتابي-ض8ل
    @القرآنُكتابي-ض8ل 6 лет назад

    ياريت بي ترجمه عربي

  • @PoultryScholars
    @PoultryScholars 3 года назад

    Excellent

  • @kamilhorvat8290
    @kamilhorvat8290 5 дней назад

    Question is, why do we allow birds to fly around without any purpose and while doing so waste so much of oxygen? That's for sure one of the reasons why we have global warming.

  • @AttemptMade
    @AttemptMade 13 дней назад

    Ok seriously please don’t ever make a video with six seconds of the screen not changing and no audio at the start. I restarted this 3 times before I realized that my wifi wasn’t being spotty.

  • @ak-ul3nc
    @ak-ul3nc 8 лет назад +1

    excellent

  • @ipodzz55
    @ipodzz55 4 года назад +5

    Your teacher shared this, i am right?

  • @brentthegravityman
    @brentthegravityman 11 лет назад +1

    Kelly whats up with the chicken
    have you considered using a flight bird skeleton?

  • @Tnbeazy
    @Tnbeazy 2 года назад

    awesome!

  • @mindf4rt
    @mindf4rt 6 лет назад

    I'm here because of It's Ok To Be Smart's 2M sub video. How are there not more videos about how birds breathe?

  • @verzen
    @verzen 10 лет назад +3

    Bats have lungs like we do and they can fly just fine. Just saying...

    • @laurenk7631
      @laurenk7631 9 лет назад +5

      Kyle Rutherford But birds can also fly at higher altitudes due in part to their respiratory adaptations and can grow larger and still fly.
      The largest flying bat, Golden-capped fruit bat weights approx 1.1kg, while the largest extant flying bird the Kori bustard weighs approx 21kg.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 9 лет назад

      Lauren K Largest flying insects were dragonfly like creatures with 2 foot wingspans long before flying reptiles and dinosaurs.

    • @MrTwostring
      @MrTwostring 9 лет назад +2

      Patrick McCurry Don't forget that giant dragonflies lived when there was more oxygen in the atmosphere. Yes, it's an interesting question why some birds are bigger than any bat. It seems there are many possible explanations.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 9 лет назад +1

      They evolved then, but survived to a little past the time of more oxygen, so that theory doesn't quite mesh with what happened.

    • @tonyhickey8849
      @tonyhickey8849 9 лет назад +1

      +Kyle Rutherford Bat lungs are still quite specialised with very thin walls and very high surface areas for their body mass. So they are similar in structure to us, but not the same.

  • @laylaa.hassan5101
    @laylaa.hassan5101 5 лет назад

    good work

  • @fahijaansari4502
    @fahijaansari4502 8 лет назад

    I don't get it first you said that inhalation meant breathing out in a bird next you said during inhalation the air is breathed in

    • @itsladydi626
      @itsladydi626 8 лет назад

      its a two phase process for one complete cycle, the air from inhalation one does not leave the body until inhalation two (due to the air reservoirs which are absent within ourselves and our single phase respiration cycle)

    • @CheapSushi
      @CheapSushi 8 лет назад +1

      When they "inhale", it goes to the sacs in the rear first, when they "exhale", THEN it goes to the lungs and the front sacs and leave out the nose again.

  • @eileenbaha6544
    @eileenbaha6544 3 года назад

    in va school and this is so much better explanined lol

  • @timebert9467
    @timebert9467 3 месяца назад

    Someone needs to have a word with bats

  • @fahimjaowad8717
    @fahimjaowad8717 3 года назад

    I want this.

  • @dirtygrin9129
    @dirtygrin9129 8 лет назад

    All I heard was "Abdominal sex"...
    I wonder how you could do that. JK XD

  • @hatsamb
    @hatsamb 7 лет назад

    You are my hero

  • @octopusph.d7737
    @octopusph.d7737 2 года назад

    insane

  • @crappyaccount
    @crappyaccount 7 лет назад

    Damn, birds are more.complicated than I thought

  • @stojadinovicdushan
    @stojadinovicdushan 4 года назад

    Wow

  • @kx4532
    @kx4532 2 года назад

    Great now explain it right

  • @priyanshu3546
    @priyanshu3546 5 лет назад

    waah

  • @nicolocaramori2964
    @nicolocaramori2964 5 лет назад

    LIKE PER IL GRANDE BERTOLUCCI

  • @TreDogOfficial
    @TreDogOfficial Год назад

    ". . .the act of flight would likely be impossible."
    Never met a bat before🦇
    Albeit they do fly rather clumsily

    • @mendesarmy9216
      @mendesarmy9216 Год назад

      bats don't fly at the same altitudes or anywhere near as far or as fast as birds do

    • @mhdfrb9971
      @mhdfrb9971 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@mendesarmy9216 they could still fly regardless

  • @fr4163
    @fr4163 6 лет назад +2

    great video, just stop talking to the viewer like they are a baby. thats a very american thing

  • @ОлександраГілевич-ю6ж

    Кщачд