I don't know why this isn't getting across to you.
The reason it's going so badly for you is that I know every move you're going to make, and I already have the evidence to show why it won't work. You're cutting and pasting from ancient gambits creationists have used for decades, and the evidence used to scuttle them is already known to me.
Your pores of Kohn and channels of Lambert allow air passage BETWEEN ALVEOLI IN THE SAME LUNG.
Yeah, the evidence shows that the avian lung is essentially like a large alveolus. Simplification. As the diagram showed you, there's a very easy transition from almost entirely tidal to almost entirely flow-through ventilation.
The alveoli interconnect - But that is not the case in the birds. THERE ARE NO ALVEOLI in the bird lung.
Here's a hint:
THERE IS NO QUADRATE BONE in the mammalian skull. But there is the stapes, which evolved from it (evidence for that will be demonstrated in another thread, if you want to see it).
Changing the name does not actually change the evolutionary source.
I thought I gave you a quotation on that point - do you want it again?
Sorry, as you learned, quote-mining is highly ineffectual. I don't know why you guys keep doing it.
So if there are no alveoli in the bird lung, your pores of Kohn and channels of Lambert bear NO RELATIONSHIP to the entirely different lung structure of birds. You are wasting my time here, Barbarian.
See above. You've been gulled on this. Let it go and learn from it.
To where did all these millions of alveoli go, then?
Simplification. They were reduced in number as some were modified. Read the diagrams and the links.
And where did all there parabronchi come from?
Check the diagram. Surprise.
Barbarian observes:
It is now primary ventilation. But it works the same way as collateral ventilation works in mammals.
Now you've abandoned any pretense at reason, and are just calling names.
The vast, vast proportion of breathing in mammals and reptiles occurs in the entry and exit of tidal air into and out of the alveoli. The Kohn and Lambert structures play very little part in that. That must be obvious from their sheer lack of size.
So your argument is that the relative sizes of structures in animals cannot change? Check out legs in dogs. Demonstrably false. Got anything else?
Barbarian chuckles:
The pores are just the openings. The Channels of Lambert are the tubes. Didn't tell you about those, either, um?
Did you miss the name of the article you cited? Bronchial atresia is a pulmonary anomaly of unknown etiology in which a segmental bronchus does not communicate with the central airways.
Yep. That's why they call it "collateral" ventilation. It takes over mostly in cases when the regular system is impaired. Again, you're assuming that the relative ratios of the two can never change. So you still have the same little problem.
Barbarian observes:
It's just one example. I showed you a slightly different possibility. It doesn't matter how it happened; each of these demonstrates that your story is false.
With respect B, you've done nothing of the kind. You have merely shown and additional way for air to pass from one alveolus to another and then back to the same bronchus.
Enlarge that, and reduce the others, and you have the bird system. Easy. You're running out of options now.
Barbarian observes:
They don't breath with ribs, either. But they still have the intercostals, just as we see the avian system is indistinguishable from a single large alveolus.
You really can't be serious.
It's true. The reptilian system was operated by ribs. Then, over time, a partial then full diaphragm evolved. But the old system is still partially functioning.
Shall I treat you to some quotes which underline the differences?
Quote mining is what got you in trouble in the first place. Remember, when you cut and paste from those creationist sites, you are only seeing what they want you to see of the quote, and even then, they often switch words to "improve" the quote.
The avian respiratory system is different from that of other vertebrates, with birds having relatively small lungs plus nine air sacs that play an important role in respiration (but are not directly involved in the exchange of gases).
Bird Respiratory System
And as you learned, this had already begun to evolve in the case of dinosaurs, but had not evolved completely by the first birds (Archaeopteryx, for example, had reptilian ribs for breathing, and could not have had the full avian system)
Avian lungs do not have alveoli, as mammalian lungs do,
See above.
Notice that? Connected AT EITHER END. An alveolus, such as birds don't have, is single ended.
As you learned, they aren't. Instead of being dead-end sacs, they communicate with others through the pores of Kohn and the channels of Lambert. You learned this earlier.
They connect, microscopically, to OTHER ALVEOLI, which end in the same place: the lung cavity and the bronchus.
Barbarian observes:
As you learned, it's quite easy to see how very simple changes could produce the highly refined form of collateral ventilation we see in birds.
I can only point out that I actually understand the physiology and structures involved. And the very existence of some of them were a complete surprise for you.
Alas, you were misinformed and misdirected
I showed you scholarly sources for them. You've shown me what you cut and paste from creationist websites.
Barbarian observes:
You're now reduced to merely repeating your assertions as if they were some kind of chant against facts. It won't work. As you learned, collateral ventilation is essentially the system found in birds. It's just opened up and simplified to become the primary system.
The word 'collateral' betrays you. It means 'alongside the main one'.
It is in mammals, just as the thoractic pump is a collateral one in mammals, but the main one in reptiles. Rock and a hard place.
1 The entire reptilian system has to be abandoned, and a completely new one put in place.
But it's not. In fact, parts of the old reptilian system, like air sacs, are retained, while other parts simplified or elaborated to a new function.
2 A hole has to appear at the bottom of the reptile lung for the air to pass out.
They are called "Pores of Kohn", and they already exist in reptiles.
3 The trachea has to become disconnected from the bronchi which lead into the reptile’s lungs, and reconnected to the air sacs
Or individual bronchioles could enlarge and others be reduced or eliminated.
The air sacs have to appear from somewhere
Already existed in some reptiles. Matter of fact, they existed in the line of reptiles from which birds evolved.
And develop entirely new connections to the lung.
Already existed.
6 The alveoli have to pack up altogether, and the new system of parabronchi substituted.
Check the diagram. A gradual restructuring of these into the modern form.
parabronchi now have to merge and become an airway leading to the nares
Simplification is no difficulty. It's directly observed to happen. The evolution of a new physical structure has been directly observed, so that's not a difficulty.
The costal musculature of the reptile has to become irrelevant, because the birds’ ribs play no or very little part is its respiration – totally unlike the reptilian system which is similar to our own.
This gradually happened, but long after birds appeared. Archaeopteryx, for example, has dinosaur ribs, and breathed mainly by the thoractic pump.
9 The entire innervation of the whole structure has to be altered, because the bird’s lung function is totally different to the reptile’s.
No, that's wrong. For example in the alignment of the quadrate from the jaw to the inner ear, the ennervation remained the same. The brain changed a bit to accomodate the change, but the nerves don't change. The same cranial nerves that pick up vibration in the lizard jaw, pick up sound in the mammalian ear.
10 Most damaging of all, the new instincts required to employ the new structures have to come from somewhere.
Nope. Collateral ventilation already existed, being merely enlarged to the primary form in birds. No need for "new instincts."
Learn from this. And come up with some ideas of your own.