Three or four wrong pictures catch nearly everyone here, and they're sneaky because the words sound so alike. Meet them head-on now and they lose their power.
Trap One: Breathing Is Not Respiration
This is the big one, and the words are cruelly similar. Breathing is the mechanical job of moving air — ribs and diaphragm pulling air into the lungs and pushing it out. Cellular respiration is something completely different: the chemical reaction inside every cell that burns glucose with oxygen to release energy. You breathe with your chest; you respire inside your cells. Breathing delivers the oxygen; respiration is what the oxygen gets used for.
Trap Two: the Heart Is Not Part of the Respiratory System
Because the heart and lungs sit side by side and feel like one breathing-and-pumping unit, loads of people file the heart under “respiratory”. It isn't. The heart is the pump of the circulatory system — its whole job is moving blood. The lungs are the respiratory system; the heart is the circulatory system. They're neighbours that work closely together, but they're two different systems doing two different jobs.
Trap Three: Blood Doesn't Make Oxygen, It Only Carries It
Here's a quiet one that wrecks answers. Blood does not produce or create oxygen — it's a courier, not a factory. The oxygen is already in the air; the lungs load it into the blood; the blood just carries it to the cells. Saying “the blood makes oxygen for the cells” loses the mark every time. The verb that earns marks is carries (or transports), never makes.
And the Quiet One: Cells Don't Store a Big Tank of Oxygen
It's tempting to picture each cell holding a little reserve tank. There's no tank. Cells use oxygen and glucose almost the instant they arrive, which is exactly why the delivery has to be constant — and why, the moment supply is cut, a cell is in trouble within minutes. The whole point of three systems working non-stop is that there's no buffer to fall back on.