The frog's respiratory system has three respiratory surfaces on its body. The frog uses these respiratory systems on its skin to exchange gas with its surroundings.
There are a few anatomical differences between the digestive system of a human and a frog. The first is that there are no villi in the small intestine of a frog. Frogs also have very weak teeth. The GI tract of the human and frog are also very different.
they are touching!
Endocrine
Skin is the respiratory organ in frogs. A thin water film is formed on the skin of frog and to retain this thin film of water for long time, mucus is produced by the mucus glands present in the skin. The O2 gets dissolved into this thin film of water from where it gets diffused into the blood capillaries. And this is the reason, why the skin of frog is richly supplied with blood capillaries. If the skin of frog dries up, the frog dies. The frogs also have lungs but 80% of respiration takes place through the skin. So, frogs have two respiratory organs 1) Skin 2) Lungs.
The frog is separated into four parts; head, trunk, forelimb and hind limb. The head only has two muscle sections while the others have between five and seven.
The organ that is part of the frog's respiratory system that is not found in the human respiratory system is the skin. The skin is not involved in human respiration.
the frog can breathe through their mouth and skin.
Respiratory System
their skin. they also have lungs but they can respire through their skin.
This website needs more people to answer these questions because i was the one that asked it......
well, the answer is so simple, a frog's heart needs oxygen which is required from the lungs therefore the circulatory system (blood/heart) needs oxygen from the respiratory system (lungs). since they are so close together, both system have easy access to one another.
The respiratory and circulatory systems work together as a unit to exchange gases between body cells and the environment
a frog can be classified having gills and lungs tadpoles have gills while frogs[or adult]have lungs
It absorbs oxygen while at the same time releases carbon dioxide across its surface.
They both protect food from going into the lungs.
Respiratory system in a frog starts from the mouth, as the mouth expands the air is taken in through the nostrils. Then the nostrils starts closing and the mouth contracts causing the air to get inside the lungs. The body and lungs contract as the mouth opens giving out carbon dioxide. The exchange of air starts at respiratory bronchioles where oxygen is taken in and carbon dioxide is given out.
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