BIO255H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Density Of Air, Hemoglobin, Oxidative Phosphorylation

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You(cid:859)ll fi(cid:374)d that if you multiply those t(cid:449)o (cid:448)alues together (cid:455)ou(cid:859)ll (cid:272)o(cid:373)e up (cid:449)ith a partial pressure of a particular gas. In the table, the percent of oxygen in the air is constant at all altitudes. It makes up a little less than 21% of the air regardless of the altitude so the major reason why the. So, this air at sea level is being compressed. That compression squeezes that oxygen into a smaller volume of space leading to a higher barometric pressure and more oxygen availability. However, as you increase in altitude there is less weight compressing the oxygen which means the availability is decreased. So, lower pressure and therefore lower po2 values: this is where the challenge comes for high altitude animals. It is not the only physiological challenge high altitude animals face. There are multitude of challenges including temperature which tends to get lower with altitude.

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