The
trachea, colloquially called the
windpipe, is a tube that connects the
pharynx and
larynx to the
lungs, allowing the passage of
air, and so is present in almost all air-
breathing animals with lungs. Only in the
lungfish, where the lung is connected to the pharynx and the larynx, is it absent. The trachea extends from the larynx and branches into the two
primary bronchi. At the top of the trachea the
cricoid cartilage attaches it to the larynx. This is the only complete ring, the others being incomplete rings of reinforcing cartilage. The
trachealis muscle joins the ends of the rings and these are joined vertically by bands of fibrous
connective tissue, the
annular ligaments of trachea. The
epiglottis closes the opening to the larynx during swallowing.