Not a lot.
However, they are both vertebrates with an internal skeleton, and they both have skin. They can also move in hopping or leaping movements. The adult frog breathes air using its lungs, like a kangaroo.
The two "Bears" are entirely different. The Koala is actually a Marsupial, therefore is is more closely related to the Kangaroo, Oppossum, and Wombat, than the Polar Bear! Koalas only weigh about 20 pounds, while Polar Bears weigh well over 1000 pounds. Koalas live in the Southern Hemisphere, Polar Bears live around the Arctic Circle. Polar Bears are the largest Bear living today.
First of all, frogs are what is called "ectotherms", meaning that they are cold blooded, and require a heat source outside of their body. Koalas are what is called "endotherms", meaning that they are warm blooded, and can create heat internally. Second, Frogs are what is called "Oviparous" meaning that they lay eggs. Koalas are viviparous, meaning that the young develops inside the body and is live birthed. Koalas are Mammals, while frogs are Amphibians. Koalas are herbivores, frogs are carnivores, and more specifically "insectivores." These are the main big, can't miss differences. Though there are thousands of tiny differences I could write a book on.
A frog is a amphibian and a fish is a fish
There are over 4800 different species of frogs.
No. Frogs and gold fish have completely different sexual organs and they are both different classes of animals.
Frogs hop, toads run or walk is a quick visual clue Frogs long strong legs Frogs jump and toads walk or run
Frogs have backbones
Snakes are predators and frogs are, for the most part, prey.
koalas and frogs are alike because they both live in nature and drink water
They both jump
Frogs and tadpoles are the same however frogs are fully grown and tadpoles are just little babies. :)
yes there can frogs are on species and there are different types of frogs in that species
No. Koalas mate with different koalas each breeding season.
Normally, yes male koalas are larger than female koalas.
No. Koalas mate with different koalas each breeding season.
Koalas and platypuses do not socialise with each other. They live in different areas, in different layers of the bush, and eat different foods.
They are not.
Koalas get chlaydia, although it's a different kind of chlamydia than the STD that affects humans.
Not at all. Male koalas will readily breed with numerous different females each season.
Yes. Koalas' fingerprint are individual to each koala, much as human fingerprints are different from everyone else's.