Since only Arthropoda have spiracles that would mean that the only sea creatures that breath through them would be CRUSTACEANS
Since only Arthropoda have spiracles that would mean that the only sea creatures that breath through them would be CRUSTACEANS
fish and certain marine life
Insects and some spiders have specialized structures called spiracles that open and close to allow gas exchange through their bodies, including breathing in oxygen and releasing carbon dioxide. These spiracles are similar in function to stomata found in plants, but are specifically adapted for respiration in these animals.
A lot. Dogs, Cats. Almost all animals have lungs.
Something light, the you can breath through.
They are called spiracles, tiny tubes alongside the insect's body which allow it to receive air. Kind of like gills, but for insects. Good luck!
Yes, ants have spiracles, which are small openings located on the sides of their bodies. These spiracles allow ants to breathe by facilitating the exchange of gases, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, with their environment.
No. The aquatic kind of spiracle (such as you'd find on rays and skates) could be located only on cartilaginous fish, or the most primitive of the bony fish. The loosest definition of spiracles seems to include a respiratory opening such as the blowhole in whales; lobsters do have ventral openings to the gills but these are anatomically dissimilar to those. (Also since lobsters are aquatic, they do not possess spiracles of the type you'd find on insects.)
animals perpetuate their kind through the genetic material (DNA)
The normal kind that all animals breathe; a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, argon carbon dioxide and trace amounts of other gases. The air they breath is the same air that you breath; the atmosphere of the planet Earth.
Frogs
pigs...cats...dogs.....monkeys