Frogs have external (outside) fertilization.
Yes
When the bearded dragons go through intercourse, the eggs are fertilized inside of the female already. So when the female lays the eggs, they are already fertilized.
Internal fertilization is like animals having sex....the egg is fertilized on the inside. External is when the egg is fertilized on the outside (like when frogs lay eggs and they need to be fertilized before they can hatch).
outside
It means that when two organisms of the lower level like frogs mate,the female lays the eggs in water and male deposits sperms over it and the fertilization happens externally.
Because frogs and toads are amphibians, their eggs are generally fertilized in the water. The female lays her eggs in the water and the male spreads sperm over the eggs to fertilize them.
A female frog can have as many as 2,000 eggs inside her body from late summer until breeding takes place in the spring. They remain in her body, maturing until she releases them in order for the male to fertilize them.
Amphibians have an external fertilisation, the males drop a sperm-packet wich the females inserts into their cloaca as in salamanders. Female frogs produce eggs and drop the eggmass into the water where they are fertilized by the male.
which have a better chance to be fertilized the egg cells of fish or the eggcells of frogs
Because the poison of some frogs, (poison dart frog's) poison is on the outside of the body, not the inside.
It doesn't stay with it's mother. A "baby frog" is not a frog at all. Female frogs lay eggs that are later fertilized by male frogs. These eggs then "hatch" into tadpoles - the sexually-immature stage of frogs. The mother frogs will rarely meet their offspring.
Clear on the outside, and a brownish, grayish color on the inside.
Yes, in spring when there are no female frogs, male frogs turn themselves into female to breed.