Abstract

In many species of air-breathing vertebrates CO2-sensitive airway receptors play an important role in ventilatory control. In ectotherms, olfactory receptors often inhibit breathing and prolong breath holding when environmental CO2 levels are high. CO2/H+ sensitive pulmonary receptors (intra pulmonary chemoreceptors (IPC) and pulmonary stretch receptors (PSR)) regulate breathing patterns in all vertebrates in a manner that reduces dead space ventilation and enhances the efficiency of CO2 excretion under conditions of environmental hypercarbia, and/or reduces CO2 loss from hyperventilation. The greater CO2 sensitivity of IPC may allow them to also serve as a venous CO2 receptor (at least transiently when levels of metabolically produced CO2 begin to rise), prevent alkalosis during hyperpnea/polypnea, and may have contributed to the evolution of the extremely thin air/blood barrier and increased diffusion capacity associated with the rigid avian lung. The presence of all three receptor groups with different degrees of CO2 sensitivity in most reptiles, however, gives rise to what appear to be anomalous responses to environmental CO2.

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