Usually, reptiles tend to have dry skin. There are no reptiles that have wet skin, unless the go in water which could almost potencially kill them. Amphibians have wet skin. So to answer your question, reptiles have dry skin. Either places, they have dry skin.
Reptiles skin is dry & water-tight. Amphibians skin is moist & water-tight.
yes reptiles have moist skin it is what makes them to survive.
Most reptiles have dry, rather hard skin, but if the reptile lives underwater it could have moist (slimy) skin hope that helped. :)
It is all slimy mainly because snakes and frogs and other amphibians also reptiles usually have moist skin.
No. Reptiles gave dry scales.
Think about where the reptiles live. Alligators, crocodiles ,caymans,Turtles (marine) , terrapins (freshwater). While those mentioned and some snakes may function in water, their skin may be wet at times but not soft and moist. Snakes (rattlers, copperheads etc.), lizzards may have dry and or softer skins (lizzards- Gila monsters, geckos, skinks). But at no time would the skin be considered soft and moist as an amphibians (frog or salamanders).. Reptiles do not naturally have moist skin if they live on land.
moist
because without moist skin they would dry up and die.
No. Reptiles and amphibians are two different classes. Amphibians have thin, water permeable skin and most need to keep their skin moist. Reptiles have dry scaly skin and are able to survive out of water indefinitely.
Salamanders lack scales and claws and have moist, glandular skin; true lizards are reptiles and have claws and dry, scaly, cornified skin.
No, they have wet slimy skin. Reptiles have dry skin.
Nope - reptiles have dry skin.
No they have moist skin otherwise they would dry out.
Reptiles: Dry, scaly skin Amphibians: Wet, slimy skin