Submitted by NimishApte t3_10a3gai in askscience
Sharlinator t1_j4422kh wrote
Reply to comment by Kittelsen in How do giraffes breathe? by NimishApte
The avian respiratory system is very different from the mammalian system. Bird lungs don't expand and contract like mammals' do; rather birds have several air sacs that expand and contract in an alternating fashion and push air unidirectionally through the lungs; the lungs have millions of narrow "tubes" where gas exchange occurs, whereas the alveoli in mammalian lungs are "bags" with only one opening.
Kevin_Uxbridge t1_j45zdp4 wrote
Which is also why they can fly and do just fine at high altitudes where the oxygen gets thin. Amazing creatures, birds.
thuhrowawa t1_j608oig wrote
It can also serve as an affiliative signal when done in a certain way. You might benefit from giving it a try.
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