A worm can stop breathing if handled to much and it's skin dries out to much.
Yes it is true that a worm can stop breathing if it gets to dried out since it breathes through its moist skin.
Amphibians breathes through their skin, they accumulate enough air from the moist on their skin. If there is no moist, they will die.
They breathe through their body walls. Leeches absorb oxygen through their skin rather than breathing through a nose.
They absorb oxygen through their skin, but they have to be moist.
The function is for water, oxygen, and carbon dioxide to pass through it, enabling the frog to either breathe or keep it's skin moist and keep the insides in.
Earthworms actually absorb oxygen through their moist skin from the soil.
The moist, thin skin of most amphibians allow cutaneous breathing: breathing through the skin. This enables amphibians to get more oxygen from the air. It also enables them to obtain some water as they swim.
Breathing with their lungs and absorbing some oxygen with their moist skin.
lungs
Either breathing or getting oxygen through their moist skin.
The slime on the frog's skin is mucus. It is necessary for the frog's skin to be moise because the frog breathes and drinks through the skin. If it were to dry out, it would suffocate. The mucus secreted by the frog's skin helps keep it moist.
Most breathing in healthy humans occurs through the nose. As air enters the nasal cavity, it is filtered of large debris by hairs lining the inside of the nose, and then further filtered through the nasal conchae, an area of folded, moist tissues; this also warms the air to near body temperature when it is cold.