frogs with gills a frogs with gills are called a tadpole
Although tadpoles breathe from gills, the gills start to disappear and lungs start to form in the frog's body. So that means that frogs breathe through lungs.(So does toads)
When a tadpole first hatches, the gills are located internally and not yet functional. As the tadpole grows and develops, the gills shift to the outside of its body and become functional for breathing underwater.
Amphibians, such as frogs and salamanders, begin life with gills for underwater breathing and later develop lungs to breathe on land as they mature. This transition from gills to lungs is part of their metamorphosis process.
Tadpoles have gills, a tail, and a suction cup like mouth.
yes, but they can also accomplish much respiration through their skin in highly aerated water.
Do you mean frogs? If you do Frogs don't have gills there a cold blooded reptile and frogs are purely air breathers so they don't need gills.
No, this is called neoteny and is ot found in frogs. It is found in some newts.
No, they don't. Baby frogs (tadpoles) do but they grow lungs when they become frogs.
No. They are air breathing reptiles who have to surface to breathe.
gills
Gills, because lungs help it live on land.
on land , frogs breathe with the help of lungs , and in water , with the help of gills.
lungs
Tadpoles have gills.
Actually Frogs only have gills when they are tadpoles.When they grow up in to Frogs the have lungs and hold their breath under water.
They have lungs. Tadpoles have gills, but lose them as they grow into frogs. Frogs can still live in water as they breathe through their skin. They also can live on land via their lungs. They are amphibious for this reason
of coarse tadpoles have gills because through there first weeks of life they live in the water. but they will slowly lose there gills and live on land.