Yes, they look like a tadpole with legs
Yes, salamanders are born out of eggs like frogs, and are "tadpoles" i think and turn into salamanders as they grow up.
Most salamanders lay eggs. Almost all amphibians do.Nearly all salamanders lay eggs. However, there are a few salamanders that give birth to live young.Some salamanders lay eggs in water. These eggs hatch into salamander larvae with gills. Other salamanders lay eggs in land. Usually these eggs hatch into tiny terrestrial salamanders that do not have gills.
Tadpoles do not lay eggs at all. Tadpoles are the young frogs or toads that hatch from eggs.
Frog eggs. Frogs lay eggs, and the eggs hatch into tadpoles. Then the tadpoles turn into frogs.
Like frogs, salamanders reproduce by laying eggs. The eggs hatch into aquatic tadpoles, the larval stage, and eventually metamorphose into the adult amphibian stage, which typically lives mostly on land.
Tadpoles which grow into FROGS
Frog eggs. Frogs lay eggs, and the eggs hatch into tadpoles. Then the tadpoles turn into frogs.
Tadpoles which grow into FROGS
Frogs lay eggs that hatch into tadpoles. Tadpoles grow up and become frogs.
2-3 weeks
Technically, neither. An adult frog lays eggs, then tadpoles hatch from these eggs. Later the tadpoles develop into frogs. So, you could really say they hatched from eggs.
That can never happen. This is because Tadpoles do not lay eggs. ***** It takes about three weeks after spawning before the tadpoles hatch out from their eggs.