Fish can only stay alive "under and in" water. Frogs are amphibious which means they can live both in and out of the water, because they absorb oxygen through their skin. I'm hoping that's what you were asking.
Amphibians could breathe through skin after they started attacking prey based on their activity rather than size, so they would suffocate if they couldn't breathe through their skin.
Fish don't need their skin. They use gill slits.
Fish have gills. They breath due to gills. Frogs, humans, etc. We don't...unfortuantely.
To maximize the surface area available for oxygen absorption in low oxygen environments such as the stagnant water many amphibians breed in.
Frogs breathe throw their skin
fish breathe through their gills. frogs breathe through their legs while in water.
fish breathe through their gills. frogs breathe through their legs while in water.
fish breathe through their gills. frogs breathe through their legs while in water.
Fish, some crustaceans, and amphibians (only in the larval stage, e.g. tadpoles).
Yes, fish do 'breathe' through gills.
Because fish have gills, and breathe water- and I cant!
fish breathe through their gills
No,not all fish breathe through gills
Most fish breathe through their gills, not moist skin! :)
through gills
yes but not through lungs they breathe through gills
No, the fishes breathe through their gills.