yes
Adult frogs usually breathe through their skin and lungs. They absorb oxygen through their moist skin, which is rich in blood vessels, when on land. When in water, frogs rely more on their lungs for respiration, taking in oxygen from the water through specialized sac-like structures.
Yea ok chrome dome go back to shiggity
over time from the day the tadpole is born it changes into a frog. when they are a tadpole they live in the water until they are a complete frog. then the adult frog lives on land from now on
frogs are preys to snakes if you don't know that go back to first stupid head
you don't you just go back to the main menu.
because their legs are pretty long and they have powerful back legs.Like a cricket When a frogs jumps, their back legs unfold so thy can go higher!
so water doesnt go down it
No. As tadpoles they go about together in the same bit of water, but when they become frogs they set out on their own.
they live in a pond because frogs like to go under them or on them.
yes because they breath air
Frogs eat many kind of insects like snails,beatalls,flies and many diffrent things
The majority of frogs do not live in water. True aquatic frogs are very rare. Most frogs need to live in moist areas or near water because they are amphibians and their skin dries out very quickly if they are too dry. However, they only enter it for a few minutes at a time. Despite this, a lot of terrestrial frogs are very good swimmers. The majority of frogs breed in water, but some of them do not. One species, the beautiful Red-Eyed Leaf Frog, lays its eggs on branches that overhang water. This protects them from aquatic predators in their embryonic stages when they cannot escape. When the tadpoles hatch they fall into the water to complete their development. Other species have bypassed water altogether. The Australian nursery frogs lay their eggs in moist leaf litter. The eggs are much larger than normal frog eggs and the tadpoles complete their development inside them, emerging as fully formed frogs with no tails. All of the frogs that lack a free swimming tadpole stage still go through being a tadpole, they just never leave their eggs.