the young live only in water, look different from their parents, breathe though gills
amphibians have their young ones in water
Adult amphibians have three tissue layers: the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. These layers give rise to different organs and tissues during development.
the different age levels are baby, toddler, child, teen, young adult, adult, elder
adult amphibians breed in nests
how do cougars look different from there young
what is this
Amphibians are superficially similar to reptiles, but reptiles are amniotes, that is they lay eggs that are adapted to dry land. Most amphibians lay eggs in water and have a juvenile stage that changes into the adult form.
Amphibians show dual life . Young amphibians are called tadpole larvae. They are aquatic . They respire via gills . Adult frogs and some salamanders can live both in water and on land while some salamanders live in water
Adult amphibians look nothing like baby amphibians.They live half of their life in water and half on land.
Amphibians do not feed their young milk. Only mammals do that.
obviously because they are smaller ^_^
Iguanas are reptiles, and although they are excellent swimmers, they are born on land. So they are not amphibians. Amphibians lay their eggs in the water and the young develop in the water until they get to their adult form. After that they are able to venture out onto land for short periods.