A tadpole breathes with gills on the side of its face. These gills are on either side of their face, and these are the holes that you would see on the side of a frogs face when they are full grown.
Gills enable tadpoles to breathe in the water.
They are little fish. Tadpoles live in water, and they require oxygen to survive, therefore they have gills. The gills allow the tadpoles to breathe.
no
Tadpoles breath the dissolved oxygen in the water.
They have internal gills while in the tadpole stage.
Well Tadpoles breath through there gills but as the tadpoles turn into frogs the gills wear off and are replaced by lungs. So both.
Tadpoles breath through their gills.
Young frogs, or tadpoles, breathe underwater using gills. Then they grow lungs and lose their gills. As adults, they breathe air using their lungs.
Gills allow them to filter oxygen out of the water, so that they can breathe underwater.
Like all insects, dragonflies breathe through their skin.
Although tadpoles breathe from gills, the gills start to disappear and lungs start to form in the frog's body. So that means that frogs breathe through lungs.(So does toads)
Adult Poison dart frogs breath through their lungs and skin. Tadpoles use gills to breathe.