Animals that are amphibians, such as frogs. Eggs are laid in water, hatch into tadpoles that live in water and swim, that grow legs and leave the water as frogs.
dragon fly, mosquito,and caimans
it is an amphibian so it lives in the water for the first part of its life and on land the next
Yes, the standard definition of an amphibian is a vertebrate animal that lives part of its life (usually the developmental/childhood portion) in water and part of its life (usually the adult portion) on land. However, this isn't always a clear distinction - many amphibians such as frogs will spend their whole lives around and in water, but gain the ability to stay on land as an adult.
The animal is an amphibian. Three examples are toads, frogs and newts.
all reptiles:)
Amphibians are creatures which spend part of their life in water and part of their life on dry land. Frogs, toads and newts are all amphibians. They all start their lives as eggs. They hatch out as tadpoles which breath through gills. As they grow, they develop lungs and legs, and are able to leave the water and walk on land.
Most amphibians are semiaquatic, spending part of their lives in water and part on land.
any animal that is required by its life cycle to spend part of its life in water and part on land. Think frog. Begins life in water as tadpole, then continues to land, then back to water for reproduction.
amphibians need both land and water to survive most of them spend some part of their lives in water and some on land.
no they live part of their life on land and in water
The biosphere is the part of Earth where life exists, including the land, water, and atmosphere. It encompasses all living organisms and their environments on the planet.
Although some types of reptiles are semi-aquatic or fully aquatic, most are fully terrestrial. Amphibians, however, spend part of their time in fresh water, and part on land. The name amphibian even refers to the fact that they live "both kinds of life."