they cant breathe because gills do not support air on land where many other gases are present
see land animals have to breathe on land...of course,and sea creatures have Gils which are used to breathe under water but their are some land and sea animals such as frogs or aquatic turtles
The ability for the aquatic animals' lungs to breathe the air on land. And the feet and mobility changes.
The platypus is semi-aquatic because, although it must live and shelter on dry land, it needs to hunt for its food in creeks and rivers. Platypuses cannot breathe underwater; nor can they search for food on land.
because there are less amount of dissolved oxygen in water so that aquatic animals breathe more faster in order to get more oxygen.
Aquatic snails cannot live on land for extended periods of time as they require a moist environment to survive. They are not able to adapt to a terrestrial environment due to their need for water to breathe and move.
The body part that only land animals have is lungs. While aquatic animals primarily use gills to extract oxygen from water, land animals evolved lungs to breathe air. This adaptation allows them to thrive in terrestrial environments where oxygen is abundant in the atmosphere.
Platypuses are indeed semi-aquatic. Platypuses live and shelter in burrows dug into dry land, but they need to hunt for their food in freshwater creeks and rivers. Platypuses cannot breathe underwater.
No, they're exclusively aquatic animals, mostly in high saline water (the sea). They're of one of the oldest and more primitive fish lineages, don't really have the gills to breathe in non moving water and can't breathe air either through their gills or skin, so they couldn't be land or even amphibious animals.
Yes.
An octopus cannot breathe on land and requires water to survive.
Yes semi aquatic means half land animal half aquatic animal
They are mammals. Amphibians are cold-blooded animals that can breathe through gills underwater as well as using lungs on land. Lions are warm-blooded and cannot breathe underwater.