Frogs are primarily freshwater creatures. While some frog species can tolerate brackish water (a mix of freshwater and saltwater), most frogs live and breed in freshwater habitats such as ponds, lakes, streams, and marshes. They typically do not thrive in saltwater environments.
No they can live in any waters fresh or not fresh, and on land too.
Seahorses are salt water and frogs are fresh water, there are special aquariums for salt water fish type creatures.
Most frogs cannot live in salt water, because it will dehydrate and kill them, but there are a very few frogs that have adaptations that allow them to be exceptions:Crab-eating frogsAfrican clawed frogsSouthern leopard frogs
no there are no tadpoles in the coral reef they can not live in salt water
Not normally. They are both fresh water organisms, but both are often found in brackish water.
Lobsters live in salt water and frogs live in or near to fresh water, so in nature the two animals would never come into contact.
Frogs can not live in salt water. The salt will kill them. don't ask me why.
Frogs do not live in beaches. They need fresh water. The ocean contains salt water, which would be harmful to frogs.
Fresh and salt water are very different for one key reason, fresh water doesn't contain salt and salt water obviously does. There are different flora and fauna in fresh and salt water for this reason.
on fresh salt water
Salt water is water that has salt in it and it is found in oceans. Fresh water does not have salt and is found in rivers and lakes.
there is salt in salt water and little salt in fresh water
salt water