yes, i taught my frog how to eat flies and hop.
ANSWER:
Not really. I have had my White's Tree Frog for 16 years and he has learned that the sound of the top coming off his terrarium means I am about to change his water and give him more crickets, so he will peek out of his little coconut shell house to check things out. In a way, I suppose this could count as "training," but it is actually more like "conditioning."
You can train a frog. I did it by first training my frog how to let him be finger feed from me, when time for meals. I did this by taking a food pellet and holding it on the top of the glass container. I then tapped the top of the glass several times to get my frogs to come up (to develop the instinct for the frog to come up just tap the top of the glass and then feed your frogs and eventually they will develop this instinct). I then, wiggled the food in front of the frogs eyes so he would get his attention on the food. Next, I put the food in "eating reach" so my frog would eat it (do not stuff the food in your frogs mouth). If this does not work then try it again at every feeding time and your frog will develop this instinct. You can basically use steps like these for all training aspects of a frog.
To hold a frog, open the palm of your hand and place the frog in it. Be sure not to squeeze or squish the frog.
green tree frog
The bones that would hold the most weight in a frog would be the urostyle. This is basically the spine of the frog.
A frog's vomarine teeth are located in the roof of the frog's mouth. They are used to hold the frog's prey.
A frog is the attachment to hold the sword scabbard to the belt.
The frog is not actually on the viola itself, but on the bow. The frog is the black thing under the rod on the end you hold.
no
organs
hold its breath
To hold the organs inside
It is not necessary, but this can help hold the frog in place more efficiently.
it is the maxilarys
It keeps the frog brain in place