Biology, asked by sahiluday3479, 1 year ago

How does the frog's organization of breathing help it survive?

Answers

Answered by love6941
1
The thin membranous skin is allowsthe respiratory gases to readily diffuse directly down their gradients between the blood vessels and the surroundings. When the frog is out of the water, mucus glands in the skin keep the frog moist, which helpsabsorb dissolved oxygen from the air.

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Frog is an amphibian it can survive both in water and on land.

So it has adapted himself into its habitat.

It can't get pure form of oxygen under water as in the atmosphere so it has a thin skin that helps it to respite under water as well as out of water....The skin of a frog is a quiet permeable that helps it suck oxygen from the surrounding.


Rather than its skin it also has nostrils and a pair of lungs in its respiratory tract that allows it to breath in oxygen in the air.

The third surface of its body from where it can respire is it's mouth lining which seldom coordinates with the nostrils and kings to provide frogs with oxygen....



Hope it helps...

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