no
A Tadpole has gills at first then it morphs into a frog which can only breath in air.
no I have never heard or seen of a frog with gills and I study herpetology! amphibians breath air
the respiratory organs of frog are skin , lungs and gills.
A tadpole can breath through their gills but they grow lungs as they turn into a frog.
toads and tadpoles being amphibians have a special system of breathing organs called gills to breath inside water.
A tadpole breathes through its gills, which are located on the sides of its head. As the tadpole grows and develops into a frog, it will undergo metamorphosis and develop lungs to breathe air instead.
Actually Frogs only have gills when they are tadpoles.When they grow up in to Frogs the have lungs and hold their breath under water.
Frogs have cutaneous type of respiration i.e respiration through skin.Some species have lungs,but very rare in occurence.To know practically,take a frog and cover it completely by a blotting paper.After some time the frog dies
because once they grow out of the tadpole stage and into the frog stage, they no longer need them because they develop lungs
gills
All fish breath will gills so gills
amphibians breath with the help of both gills and lungs. example frog. frog in its larval stage is called a tadpole and its respiratory organ is gills. in its later stages of life (adult) its respiratory organs changes into lungs