Any class of vertebrate with a three-chambered heart has two atria and one ventricle. An example would be amphibians such as frogs.
Amphibians have three chambers in the heart: Two atria and one ventricle
The heart is the organ that has two atria and one ventricle.
The atria are chambers that receive blood that returns to the heart.
salamanders have a heart with one ventricle and two atria
And the ventricle.
the atria and ventricle work together as a team - the atria fill with blood, then dump it into the ventricle. The ventricle then squeeze, pumping blood out the heart, while the ventricle are squeezing, the atria refill and gets ready for the next contraction. so when the blood gets pumped ,how does it know which way to go?
In turtles, the heart has two atria and a single ventricle partially divided by a wall of tissue called a septum. In crocodiles, there are two atria and two separate ventricle.
2 atria and 2 ventricle
I believe you meant to type "lower" instead of "lover". The lower chamber is the ventricle. Reptiles (and birds) have a three-chambered heart (two atria and one ventricle). Mammals have a four-chambered heart (two atria and two ventricles).
There are 4 chambers of the heart and here are what they do. The Right atria is where blood comes into this part from the vena cava and is pumped to the right ventricle The Right ventricle pumps blood to the lungs Left atria is where the blood returns to the heart through the left atria Left ventricle is where the blood is pumped from the aorta to the rest of the body
There are two atria and one ventricle. The two atria are fed from the body and the lungs. The single ventricle pumps into both the body and the lungs. Blood mixes in the ventricle.
yes it does