the salamander.
Dogs breath through their mouth and nose using their lungs.
Penguins use their lungs to breath.
The ocelot breathes through its nostrils like other mammals. When it inhales, air enters through its nostrils and passes through the nasal passages into the lungs, where oxygen is exchanged with carbon dioxide. The ocelot then exhales, releasing carbon dioxide from its lungs through the same pathway.
it breathes through its nose and on the rare occasion maybe its mouth
No. It breathes through its blowhole. The whale eats through its mouth, however.
The frog gets oxygen through its lungs just as we do. It can also absorb it through the skin and the mouth lining. Overall the surface area of the skin wouldn't be enough to absorb enough oxygen to supply all the cells of the body. However, absorption through the skin is very useful when the frog is under water.
No, all modern amphibians do not only use their lungs for respiration. They can also respire through their skin and tissues in the lining of their mouth.
They breathe through their skin, their mouth lining, and their throat lining, provided they are sufficiently moist.
thrugh its mouth
It's nose or mouth just like us because it is a mammal as well. It has lungs just like us humans and it breathes just like us.
The mouth because it controlls what goes in and out
A turtle breathes oxygen through its mouth and nose into its lungs. A sea turtle can stay underwater longer than most other animals,because turtles move slower, conserving more energy and needing to breathe less oxygen than aerobic animals do.They always breath from their nose but if their nose is blocked they breath from their mouth.