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  1. Like reptiles, amphibians are cold-blooded. Because of their special skin, they require very specific living conditions. Too much sun can damage their cells. Too much wind can dry their skin and ...

  2. Cold-bloodedness, the state of having a variable body temperature that is usually only slightly higher than the environmental temperature. This state distinguishes fishes, amphibians, reptiles, and invertebrate animals from warm-blooded, or homoiothermic, animals (birds and mammals).

  3. All amphibians are cold-blooded animals and most metamorphose from a juvenile to an adult form. They cannot generate their own body heat, instead relying on the temperature of their environment to help them keep warm or cool enough to survive.

  4. May 25, 2018 · Amphibians are ectotherms (cold-blooded animals). Their bodies do not produce their own heat. Above is a Marañón poison frog. Amphibians, like reptiles, are ‘ectothermic’, or ‘cold-blooded’. This means that – unlike endothermic, or warm-blooded, animals such as mammals – amphibians do not generate their own body heat.

  5. May 30, 2019 · These terms just don’t really work. The term “cold-blooded” implies that these animals are in a never-ending struggle to stay warm. That really isn’t correct. Many species do like it hot, with some monitor lizards basking at temperatures of 120–150 F. I’d certainly call that some warm blood!

  6. Feb 18, 2023 · Amphibians are cold-blooded, vertebrate animals that have an aquatic phase of life (spent in water, breathing through gills) and a terrestrial phase of life (living on land, breathing with lungs). Cold-blooded means that an amphibian can’t generate its own body heat. Instead, their temperature varies with the temperature of the surrounding ...

  7. Most amphibians have thin, moist skin that is permeable, allowing liquids and gases to pass through it easily. Cold-blooded Amphibians are not able to control their internal body temperature.

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