They share jumping like frogs. They also share size and personality like when a human or larger animal comes near they swim/hop away from them.
Most evolutionary scientists today do not think that amphibians evolved from the lungfish. They do share some characteristics, but the lungfish has no hint of legs.
Something that all amphibians share is the duel life, smooth skin, and cold blood.
Dinosaurs are more closely related to mammals. Both mammals and dinosaurs share a reptilian ancestor that they don't share with amphibians.
The group of fishes most closely related to ancestral amphibians are the lobe-finned fishes, which include the coelacanths and lungfishes. These fishes share certain characteristics with amphibians, such as limbs with digits and lungs or lung-like structures, indicating a close evolutionary relationship.
Yes. they share many characteristics.
A group of rabbits is called a "warren." (This is also the name for their home, a network of underground tunnels.) The taxonomical group that rabbits belong to is "Leporidae."
Animals belonging to the same phyla share similar body plans and characteristics. For example, animals in the phyla Chordata, which includes vertebrates like mammals, birds, fish, and amphibians, share a notochord and dorsal nerve cord during their development.
Mode of reproduction
Lungfish and amphibians share several key characteristics, including a dual respiratory system that allows them to breathe both through gills and lungs, enabling them to thrive in aquatic and terrestrial environments. They both exhibit a life cycle that includes an aquatic larval stage and a metamorphosis into a more terrestrial adult form. Additionally, both groups possess a similar skeletal structure, featuring paired limbs, which reflects their evolutionary relationship as they adapted to life on land.
Nothing, there not the same. They don't share characteristics.
Which organims would share the most characteristics
The characteristics that a pea plant does share are color variants