Amphibians, like frogs.
An amphibian is a type of animal that lives in the water when its young and lives on land when its an adult (e.g a frog) An amphibian is a type of animal that lives in the water when its young and lives on land when its an adult (e.g a frog)
Hippopotamus
Early land animals had to return to the water to reproduce.
An anadromous fish, born in fresh water, spends most of its life in the sea and returns to fresh water to spawn. Salmon, smelt, shad, striped bass, and sturgeon are common examples. A catadromous fish does the opposite - lives in fresh water and enters salt water to spawn. Most of the eels are catadromous.
Cattle do not have to be killed to harvest horns. However, harvesting horns from an adult animal that does not naturally shed their antlers / horns (such as deer) is a painful and traumatic experience that is essentially an amputation. Usually, horns taken from cattle (such as farm raised Water Buffalo) are harvested at the time the animal is slaughtered for meat.
Maybe frogs.
An animal that lives in water or spends alot of time in water
Water
hippopotamus
a seahorse lol
Must be a trick question, as fish generally live in water in BOTH early and adult stage, and that is what the question is asking.
An amphibian is a type of animal that lives in the water when its young and lives on land when its an adult (e.g a frog) An amphibian is a type of animal that lives in the water when its young and lives on land when its an adult (e.g a frog)
Hippopotamus
No snake is slimy. As to dry, that is difficult to define for an animal that spends its entire life in the water.
A duck lives on land. I only goes in the water to get food, swim, and/or clean itself. It spends most of it's time in the water but sleeps and rests on land.
During development of a jellyfish, this mysterious sea animal goes through a stage of having 24 legs and no eyes. A jellyfish spends it's entire life in the water.
Yes, the skin of amphibians is not water proof and will dry out (and kill the animal) if there is not enough moisture in the environment.