Amphibians do not feed their young milk. Only mammals do that.
No, amphibians don't need milk. Since they can't produce any, they wouldn't have survived if they needed any.
No, they do not. Amphibians lay eggs in water. The eggs give the embryos all the nutrition they need until they hatch. After that, they're on their own and live on small insects. No. Only mammals feed their young milk.
No, amphibians do not feed their young with milk. Some amphibians lay eggs that the young, called tadpoles, hatch from and then develop on their own without parental care.
No. Frogs are amphibians and do not nurse their offspring.
Amphibians lay eggs and do not produce milk. Animals give birth to their young and produce milk. Those are the main differences.
They do not feed their young milk. That is what Mammals do and what makes a mammal a mammal.
No, amphibians do not drink from their mother's milk. Unlike mammals, amphibians do not produce milk; they typically undergo external fertilization and have a life cycle that includes aquatic larvae, such as tadpoles, which absorb nutrients from their environment rather than from a parent. Once they metamorphose into adults, they primarily obtain moisture and nutrients from their surroundings.
No , they don't feed young .
No, only mammals (of whom have mammary glands) are able to produce milk.
No, because salamanders are amphibians. Only mammals produce milk and feed it to their young. Salamanders are carnivores.
Yes but keep in mind that this is for mammals only, birds, fish, amphibians, and other animals like that do not produce milk
yes all living things need water to survive.