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It can breathe from its nose and mouth.

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14y ago

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Related Questions

Where do polar bears breathe in the Arctic?

Polar bears breathe above water.


How do polar bears breathe through water if they can only breathe with lungs?

They don't. Polar bears cannot breathe under water.


What do polar bears breath?

AnswerThey breathe oxygen, like we do.


Where do seals breathe from?

Physically, they breathe through their noses or mouths. In the Arctic, they come up for air through what are sometimes called 'blowholes'. And sometimes, Polar bears are waiting for them there.


How big is a bear mouth?

A polar bears moth is double the size of an average humans mouth


Can polar bears breath?

yea all animals can breathe unless they're dead


How do polar bears get their oxygen?

When polar bears breathe, their lungs fill with a mixture of gases including oxygen. The polar bear's body separates out most of the gases which are not oxygen and expels them. The oxygen is then transported into the bloodstream by small vessels in the lungs.


What does a polar bear's mouth look like?

It looks like any other bear's mouth, except that it has white fur.


Can polar bears breathe underwater?

No, polar bears have lungs just like humans and other mammals. Polar bears can hold their breath for several minutes at a time, but they have to come up to breath frequently.


How do bears breathe?

The same way as most other animal life, at least other mammals. The inhale through their nose and mouth into their lungs and exhale by the same route in reverse. Long snout helps warm the inhaled air, and along with a large, Roman nose, they have asense of smell. Polar bears do not breath under water; they just hold their breath.


How do panda bears breathe through their nose or mouth?

Well pandas, strangely smell with their ears and hear with their nose. so I think they breathe with their mouths!


Where do seal breathe?

Physically, they breathe through their noses or mouths. In the Arctic, they come up for air through what are sometimes called 'blowholes'. And sometimes, Polar bears are waiting for them there.