Frogs do not have lungs that are visible from the outside. Their lungs are typically pinkish and located inside their body cavity.
Frogs have lungs to breathe air like humans, but they also have a unique respiratory system that allows them to absorb oxygen through their skin when underwater. This is why frogs can stay submerged for extended periods of time without needing to come up for air.
Frogs have underdeveloped lungs, so they must have a moist skin so that oxygen can diffuse into their bodies. Their lungs do not function well enough to be used on their own.
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)
because the frogs skin is served as a supplementary organ of gas exchange frogs use their tiny little lungs to breath when they are on land. so if they had huge lungs then they would just be in the way because the whole part of the lung was not in need! :D
Most frogs have lungs, but their are lungless frogs. They can also breath thru their skin.
Frogs do not have lungs that are visible from the outside. Their lungs are typically pinkish and located inside their body cavity.
no.
Actually frogs dont breathe from their lungs. They have lungs but they don't use them because their skin is so thin that they can breathe from it.
Yes they do. All frogs, salamanders and Caecillians have lungs. However the tadpoles do not and develop lungs in the time that they live in water.
snakes and frogs need lungs to help them breath becuse when they grow they don't grow with gills they grom with lungs instead.
yes
Yes
yes
The glottis opens to the pharynx leading to the lungs.
No, they don't. Baby frogs (tadpoles) do but they grow lungs when they become frogs.
Frogs have lungs to breathe air like humans, but they also have a unique respiratory system that allows them to absorb oxygen through their skin when underwater. This is why frogs can stay submerged for extended periods of time without needing to come up for air.