Breathing is breathing is breathing whatever you use to do it with. There is no special term or word to my knowledge that specifically means "Breathing with gills".
Lizards do not have gills. They have lungs for breathing air, unlike aquatic animals that have gills to extract oxygen from water.
Roosters are not an aquatic species and therefore do not have gills. If you are referring to the red skin hanging under the beak, they are called wattles and they help cool the chicken during hot weather.
Neither, in general lungs are only good for animals that breath air and fins are used for swimming not breathing. In a water environment, oxygen exchange is accomplished using organs called "gills" and fish have gills.
Yes Sharks have gills, they are five slits located just in front of their pectoral fins. Without Gills a shark would not be able to breathe underwater.
frogs with gills a frogs with gills are called a tadpole
*What ARE fish breathing ORGANS. Your subject is plural, my friend. They are called gills.
Gills.............
The fishes have gills for breathing
Gills, the larval forms of amphibians still have gills wich drop off eventually at the end of metamorphosis.
gills are structures in fish for breathing in water while gills chambers are the cavities in which gills are enclosed
Gills
Gills
their gills
Mammals do not have gills. They rely on other respiratory organs, such as lungs, for breathing.
breathing tube
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "gills" (fish breathing organs).
Yes, octopuses have gills that allow them to breathe underwater.