Respiration of an amphibian varies, especailly on what stage in it's developemen it is. For a frog in its tadpole stage it uses gills as a fish would. When it matures it has lungs to take in oxygen. Some amphibians are able to realse carbon dioxide into water through their skins in a process known as cutaneous (may be spelled wrong).
Frogs obtain oxygen by breathing through their skins. This unique process allows them to live in both water and on land.
frogs breathe through their mouth and can hold air in their mouth. That's why they have a bubble in their mouth.
They take in oxygen and release co2 by their skin, lungs and sometimes tissue in their throats.
so this happenes
the animals breathes in and out. So this is the process
This is the correct answer
Yes aquatic life does need light and oxygen
Amphibians are said to have evolved from fish such as the lungfish or lobe finned fish. These fish's ponds may have dried up and the fish had the need to develop a lung and legs to breathe oxygen and walk on land. Amphibians technically do not live on land though because they spend most of their lives near bodies of water.
What?? Plants don't take in oxygen. They take in carbon dioxide and make oxygen. Reread your textbook and you will be just fine.
Yes organisms take oxygen from the air and aquatic organisms take oxygen from the water using their gills. Some do. Most only from one or the other. For example a tuna fish gets pretty much all its oxygen from oxygen dissolved in water. Humans get all our oxygen from the air. Mudskippers get oxygen from both. Yes. Land animals take in oxygen that plants release using their noses. On the other hand, aquatic or marine animals take in oxygen using their gills.
Neither trachea nor bronchial tree take in any oxygen from the air. It gets oxygen via blood supply.
they breathe
Amphibians breath through their skin. They take in oxygen through their moist skin and it goes to their lungs.
they have oxygen they have to have oxygen
They take in oxygen and release co2 by their skin, lungs and sometimes tissue in their throats.
Amphibians
Amphibians can absorb oxygen through their skin - reptiles need to physically breathe.
Yes aquatic life does need light and 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.
Amphibians can breath through their nostrils. But many types can absorb oxygen through their skin.
amphibians are found in coral reefs they are found in in tiny oxygen holes of coral
Tadpoles, or baby amphibians, get their oxygen from the water via gills. Once they mature, they have lungs, and get most of their oxygen from the air. However, they have to remain moist because they still absorb oxygen through the skin, too.
They use organs called gills that absorb the oxygen from the water. As far as amphibians go, they have both gills and lungs and are able to breath from the water and the atmosphere.