There are many differences between a human and a frog's glottis. A frog's glottis is located in the frogs respiratory system, the human's glottis is located in the human larynx.
Human glottis is located in human larynx in throat and it also contains vocal cords while frogs glottis is located in frog's respiratory system , with out larynx and vocal cords .
The glottis is used to breath and vocalize
The Glottis lets the frog breathe.(it's like humans have lung's to breathe)
The glottis is used for making sounds and for breathing andalows air to enter through a opening in the back of the mouth
Frogs outside nostril are just slits while our nostril comes out. The inside is located in the mouth. We obviously do not have a nose in our mouth.
the frogs glottis is allot larger than a humans since the size is very different!
The glottis in the frog is equivalent to the larynx in the human, atleast from what I know.
they are smaller first of all and ours are bigger
The difference is size, shape and the texture.
The difference is size, shape and the texture.
Frogs have to push food down their throat with their eyes, and humans do not.
the Glottis.
The glottis is the hole that leads into the treachia.
No humans do not have fat bodies, like frogs, humans store their fat in slabs.
To produce deep tones the glottis widens.
i believe the answer you're looking for is the trachea. correction; It is the Rima glottidis
I have heard that a frogs glottis is larger than a humans...
The difference is that the second "frogs glottis" has a question mark.
A frogs pharynx is twice the size of a humans
The glottis opens to the pharynx leading to the lungs.
so water doesnt go down it
ok it is about 738 feet long
It leads to the frogs lungs.to the lungsThe glottis is tube-like structure in the frog's throat that leads to the larynx and then the trachea. It eventually leads to the lungs.
There are 9 differences
frogs mouth part can be named as SNOUT.
Frogs have smaller bones then humans.
the Glottis.
Humans use lungs only, Frogs can "breathe" through their thin moist skin, through gills, and lungs