Fish use their gills to breath in oxygen. You know...the skin flappy things on the side of their faces? Yeah. Those.
Yes. The fish does not use its mouth to breathe. It uses its gills.
No, the fishes breathe through their gills.
Fish breathe underwater using their gills. As water passes over their gills, oxygen is absorbed from the water and carbon dioxide is released. This process allows fish to extract oxygen from the water and breathe efficiently.
Gills allow the fish to extract oxygen from the water. Without oxygen, the fish would die. So the answer is TRUE.
Fish breathe through their gills. There are usually gills on either side of the pharynx. Gills have thread-like structures (filaments). These filaments exchange the oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Yes. The fish does not use its mouth to breathe. It uses its gills.
A barracuda is a fish and like other fish it uses gills to extra oxygen from the water in which it swims.
It uses its gills for breathing.
yes, fish can breathe. they do this by using their gills.
Most fish breathe with gills.
fish breathe through their gills
Type your answer here... A fish uses gills to breathe its gills filter oxygene out of the water tadpoles have gills aswell.
Kinda-sorta. Sharks are fish, they use gills to get oxygen from the water. So it's a kind of breathing even if there are no lungs involved.
Yes, fish do 'breathe' through gills.
Fish breathe with the help with gills.
Most fish breathe through their gills, not moist skin! :)
Jawless fish breathe from gills.