Yes
Blue poison dart frogs, also called okopipi, move around using short leaps. They generally stay relatively close to water sources. Tadpoles will wriggle onto their mother's back after they hatch, and she will carry them to a pool of water in the canopy, high above most possible predators.
A Blue dart frog doesnt have webbed feet so it is a poor swimmer yu will never find it in water!!!
Adult Poison dart frogs breath through their lungs and skin. Tadpoles use gills.
All frogs pass wastes through their cloacas, specifically their cloacal openings.
it can go about 13 mph
its body moves
by using their poison to kill their prey
The blue poison dart frog is the most endangered species
yes all frogs do
yes they do
Poison Dart Frogs are about the size of your thumbnail
Poison dart frogs got that name not because the frogs have poison darts - they haven't - but because humans used the poison from the frogs to poison their darts.
Poison dart frogs are carnivores, which would make them consumers.
The blue poison dart frog is the most endangered species
in forests
the most endangered frog is the blue poison dart frog!!!
no, they are posionous, but remember they are frogs.
in the rainforest.
yes all frogs do
yes they do
Dendrobates pumilio
Strawberry Poison Dart frogs have a red boby and blue legs and feet.
normal
Poison Dart Frogs are about the size of your thumbnail