they breathe through there skin
Oxygen dissolves on the mucus of their skin and goes into their cardiovascular system. And since it goes through the mucus of their skin they have to stay moist.
Through their butts.
Earthworms require oxygen to breathe, and when soil is saturated with water, there is not enough air present for the earthworms to survive. The excess water limits the movement of air in the soil, causing oxygen levels to drop and suffocating the earthworms.
In corn plants, the cells that have a function most similar to blood vessels in earthworms are the xylem and phloem cells. The xylem transports water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, akin to how blood vessels carry nutrients and oxygen in earthworms. The phloem, on the other hand, distributes sugars and other organic compounds produced through photosynthesis, similar to the role of blood in distributing nutrients throughout the earthworm's body. Together, these vascular tissues facilitate the transport of essential substances in plants, paralleling the circulatory function in earthworms.
the worm especially earthworms
Earthworms exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide through their skin. They absorb oxygen from the air and release carbon dioxide into the environment through their moist skin. This process is called cutaneous respiration.
Earthworms respire and take in oxygen directly from the skin and releases co2 from the skin as well.It has no vascular system so it gets all it's oxygen through diffusion through it's skin if that's what you mean. In other terms its individual cells respire just as any other animal cells would.
New cells grow on their ends causing work to get longer
Red Blood cells help you get oxygen to your cells
yes itb is i lovr it lolllololoolol
An earthworm's respiratory system consists of their skin, which is thin and moist, allowing for gas exchange with the environment. Oxygen is absorbed through the skin while carbon dioxide is released. There are no specialized respiratory organs such as lungs or gills in earthworms.
earthworms respire through their skin and they must coat themselves in mucus to allow dissolved oxygen to pass into their bloodstreams. like most all land-based animals, earthworms cannot breathe underwater so when you see them emerge from the ground after a deluge rain they are merely trying to find oxygen to breathe just like any other animal would