Toads are a type of frog so yes.
yes
they have guilds
All amphibians have a life stage that occurs in water. They do not need to live in water. For example, toads come from eggs laid in water that turn to tadpoles and the tadpoles develop into toads that live almost exclusively on land.
Tadpoles need to develop their lungs before they can come out of water (at the beginning of their metamorphosis they have only gills).
Frogs start out as tadpoles and then they develop into jumping frogs. They start life in water.
Yes they do. All frogs, salamanders and Caecillians have lungs. However the tadpoles do not and develop lungs in the time that they live in water.
Tadpoles are the young of frogs. The tadpoles will eventually develop into frogs.
They usually live in a river or a pond that is shady and muddy.
Tadpoles will eventually develop into an adult amphibian - frog or toad, for example.
Most tadpoles develop first in eggs, and then in a body of freshwater, such as a pond, stream, or other small pool. There are a few species that develop in special pouches on the parents body.
The tadpole is the juvenile stage. As it gets older, it turns into a frog, not a fish.
No, because there aren't sexual tadpoles. Tadpoles are the immature forms, and sexuality does not develop until they become frogs.
They develop in water, with some exceptions. Some salamanders are live-bearing and some frogs have a larval stadium that develops inside the egg.
If they do this in different stages of life, they are amphibians. For example, frogs are water born and until they develop lungs they are "tadpoles"