Larvae get it with gills, Adults get it with lungs, and most amphibians can get minimal amounts with their moist skin.
by breathing
Breathing with their lungs and absorbing some oxygen with their moist skin.
From there souroundings Amphibians as larvea or tadpoles use gills to obtain oxygen. They then go into a metamorphic stage where they have both gills and developing lungs, and as adult they breath through lungs as we do.
through there skin.....
Either through their lungs as adults, Gills as larvae, and small amounts of oxygen through their moist skin.
The moist, thin skin of most amphibians allow cutaneous breathing: breathing through the skin. This enables amphibians to get more oxygen from the air. It also enables them to obtain some water as they swim.
they have oxygen they have to have oxygen
Some species of amphibians do not have lungs or gills, but obtain all their necessary oxygen and water through their skin. Other amphibians have lungs for breathing air, but use their skin to take in additional oxygen, as well as water, through capillaries in their skin.
they breathe
They obtain oxygen from water through gills (during at least part of their life cycle).
The lungs are the saclike organ in amphibians that take in oxygen from the air. Oxygen is then transferred from the lungs to the bloodstream through a process called respiration. This allows the amphibian to breathe and obtain the necessary oxygen for metabolic processes.
It depends. If it is a fish, they get oxygen from the water with gills. All other living beings in the kingdom Animilia get O2 with lungs, although certan amphibians, such as frogs, aquire lungs as they mature.
Amphibians can absorb oxygen through their skin - reptiles need to physically breathe.