Well, sort of.... They start out as little black dots in a jelly-like egg that is usually in a body of water. Then, they hatch into tadpoles. They tadpoles metamorphose into toads after a few weeks
No. If you squeezed one, it would turn to jelly.
No, they do not lay hard shelled eggs. They lay eggs that lack a protective membrane and a shell which is the reason they must lay them in water.
No. Toads lay eggs in long gelatinous strings.
the eggs are soft because they lay them in water
No, they lay eggs but the eggs they lay are hard-shelled, like a birds eggs. For example, crocs lay eggs and when they hatch the baby crocs just pop out o their, lyk they do when yr watching cartoons!
They Lay hard shelled eggs.
Amphibians live in both water and on land, while even the waterbirds that are around water all the time never actually live in the water. Also, birds can fly, while amphibians can't, and birds lay hard-shelled eggs while amphibians lay soft-shelled eggs. There are many more differences, but I don't have time to list them all.
No, their eggs are soft. Caviar is fish eggs.
No it lays women
lay shelled eggs
Yes; platypuses lay soft, leathery eggs rather than hard-shelled eggs.
to protect the developing chick and hold it as an incubator
Geckos usually lay 2 hard shelled eggs that are deposited 4-8" deep in soil.
Some lizards like crocodiles, Birds, possibly some dinosaurs, some turtles,
No. Most reptiles lay eggs, as do most amphibians, and many species of fish. There is even a subgroup of mammals known as monotremes, which lay eggs. This group is made up of just the platypus and the echidna. Insects, arachnids and many invertebrates also lay eggs.
no because all amphibians don't lay eggs