yes
Mostly by their lungs, skin percentage is small to non-existent (in all toads).
Frogs and toads have gills as tadpoles, and lungs as adults.
No.only at tadpole stage,all frogs and toads have lungs.
Amphibians such as toads, frogs and newts, etc.
Frogs and toads, like most vertebrates have two lungs. Frogs and toads also exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide straight to and from the blood via their skin, which (unlike ours) is permeable. So they actually have quite small and simple lungs for vertebrates, frogs that live in drier environments will have bigger lungs (as they can't rely so much on respiration through the skin) as frogs that live in wet environments.
Frogs and toads go through a process called metamorphosis, which involves distinct physical changes. They start as aquatic tadpoles, breathing through gills and feeding on plant matter. As they grow, they develop limbs and lungs, eventually transitioning into adult frogs or toads with fully developed lungs for breathing on land.
Although tadpoles breathe from gills, the gills start to disappear and lungs start to form in the frog's body. So that means that frogs breathe through lungs.(So does toads)
Well we have two things, newly hatched frogs and toads are tadpoles. New frogs and toads who have recently become frogs and toads from tadpoles are called froglets and toadlets,
some frogs breath through skin some don't.
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
Frogs and toads begin their lives as eggs, typically laid in water. These eggs hatch into tadpoles, which are aquatic larvae that breathe through gills and have tails for swimming. As they mature, tadpoles undergo metamorphosis, developing legs and lungs, eventually transforming into adult frogs or toads. This life cycle highlights their transition from an aquatic to a terrestrial environment.
They are vertebrates.