A lot. Dogs, Cats. Almost all animals have lungs.
Every mammal breaths through internal lungs (as we humans do) .
fish
Only whales have lungs .No other fish has lungs they have gills.
When amphibians are babies, they have gills, but most adult amphibians breathe with a pair of lungs excluding salamanders.
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.
Lung just like any other bird
Because while sleeping you have to breath with your lungs and they ruin their lungs by smoking. No offense but what kind of question is that?!
Amphibians are tricky. Some - like frogs and toads - start out using gills when they're tadpoles and switch over to lungs as they mature. There's a salamander that has the option to choose depending on water level whether to keep the gills or to develop lungs as it matures. Some are so good at absorbing oxygen through their skin that they can stay submerged indefinitely even without gills.
Triops are ancient aquatic shrimps; they possess gills and not lungs. The gills colapse when not in water, and are basically non functional. So the answer is no, triops cannot breath out of water.
fish and certain marine life
Kinda-sorta. Sharks are fish, they use gills to get oxygen from the water. So it's a kind of breathing even if there are no lungs involved.
Fish using their gills to get oxygen from water.Mammals and most other animals using some kind of opening in their skin to inhale the oxygen from the air.
Since only Arthropoda have spiracles that would mean that the only sea creatures that breath through them would be CRUSTACEANS
what kind of a question is that it breathes throught its nostrils and then the air goes into its lungs... blah blah i think you know the rest