Biology, asked by snehasidharth9424, 1 year ago

How is a fisherman and a frog fish alike?

Answers

Answered by narasimhulugajula
0

The big difference is that frogs are amphibians and breathe air. Most frogs lay their eggs in water and in the larval stage live in water and have gills in order to breathe; when they mature they lose their gills and tails, move onto land and breathe air, some with lungs, others by absorbing oxygen through their skin. Some frogs bypass this larval stage.

Fish live in water, and have gills to extract oxygen from the water. There are a few fish, such as the walking catfish and the betta splendens that breathe air, but very few air breathing fish exist.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Explanation:

Fish have swim bladders which allow them to float and maintain buoyancy, frogs are amphibians and are a separate classification entirely, as well as skin which they breathe through similar to how fish have gills to breathe/filter oxygen. Different animals entirely.

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