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:
Only dead ones--no extant amphibians live in salt water.
fresh water
ducks and fish not monkeys nor frogs or gorillas
Some crabs live in salt marshes, such as the horseshoe crab. Another animal is the juvenile fish. A salt marsh is connected to another body of water, like an ocean. River otters may live in salt marshes as well.
It is possible.
Frogs can not live in salt water. The salt will kill them. don't ask me why.
Frogs are not adapted to live in salt water.
Salt marshes are more spread out.
salt marshes and lakes that they can catch fish
Places where frogs live- in water(swamps, marshes, lakes,etc.)
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.
Salt marshes are an area between land and brackish water that are known to flood. Salt marshes collect sediments and nutrients that are vital to the ecosystem.
Grasses, trees, sedges, reeds and rushes that have adapted to periodic flooding. Examples of these are mangroves and rice. It is a habitat for some fishes and crustaceans. Other inhabitants include leeches, mosquitoes, frogs, snakes and snails. Marshes also serve as feeding and nesting sites for waterfowl and shorebirds. In short, a habitat for numerous unique plants and animals.
The coastal marshes are saltwater marshes.