What are the adaptations and modified structures that enable amphibian to stay longer out of water?
Answers
Answer:
The adults live on land for part of the time and breathe both through their skin and with their lungs. Adaptations for land in amphibians include protective skin and eyelids that allow them to adapt to vision outside of the water
Explanation:
Amphibians are frogs, toads, newts and salamanders. ... Reptiles are turtles, snakes, lizards, alligators and crocodiles. Unlike amphibians, reptiles breathe only through their lungs and have dry, scaly skin that prevents them from drying out.
Answer:
Amphibians and reptiles have many different adaptations that allow them to live in deserts, avoiding extremes in aridity, heat, or cold. The animals may be active only in certain seasons and at favorable times of the day. Many use the environment to actively regulate their body temperatures, preventing lethal extremes. And some are well adapted to the surfaces they live on — with modified appendages for burrowing or the capacity to run on, dive into, swim in or sidewind across loose sand.