they breathe with gills
Reptiles always breathe with lungs. Amphibians may breathe with lungs, gills or through their skin.
They breathe with gills and lungs
Generally through either gills or lungs.
A amphibian has neither lungs or gills
amphibians such as frogs and toads are born in water with gills and looks like a minnow; but as they grow older they get lungs and breathe oxygen
Young amphibians mainly use their skin and gills to breathe. Their skin is thin and moist, allowing oxygen to pass through directly into their bloodstream. Gills are present in aquatic species and help them extract oxygen from water. As they mature, they develop lungs for breathing air.
Yes, all reptiles breathe using lungs. If they are underwater they have to come to the surface to breathe. Amphibians (frogs, newts, salamanders etc) are NOT reptiles. Amphibians often breathe through their skin.
partly gills, partly lungs
i guess lungs and gills. gills at the earlier stage and lungs at the maturity.
Amphibians as larvea or tadpoles use gills to obtain oxygen. They then go into a metamorphic stage where they have both gills and developing lungs, and as adult they breath through lungs as we do.
Well Tadpoles breath through there gills but as the tadpoles turn into frogs the gills wear off and are replaced by lungs. So both.
Adults usually have lungs or breathe through their skin and throat. The larva and some neotenic species exchange oxygen and carbondioxide with the help of well- blooded gills.