A male has a dick and a female doesn't. Just like real life.
Well the female is 2 1/2 - 3inches and the males are about 2- 2 1/2 inches + the males crock.
male frog is smaller than female frog.
well a boy tree frog will white on the head and a girl will have white on the bottom of her neck
How do you tell a male pacific frog from a female
Only if the male is at least half the size of the female, as the female will recognise it as food.
they are all called tree frogs male or female
What is the diffrence between A plant tree and rain forest frog?
Depends on if they're male or female. A female with eggs can weigh around 6g. I happened to have a tree frog neurobiologist in the room, which was pretty convenient.
Males have gray or black throats, while females have lighter tones.
the male releases the sperm and then the female releases her eggs.
0 if it is a male. 1 if itz a female
The easiest way to tell a male green tree frog from a female is the way of their sound. Males seem to bark often while females have a quiet whispering croak that isn't so loud. Another way to tell is by the green tree frogs body. Look at the stomach, a male doesnt have any spot while a female has a paint looking spot. ( it is just a darker white)
You cannot tell if a persimmon tree is a male or female at 4 inches tall. Female trees are the only ones that produce fruit. The flowers on a female tree are slightly larger than a male.
i have got hawthorn trees but dont know if theye male o female
Frogs practice external fertilisation, that is, the male frog does not have a penis. He fertilises the female's eggs by spraying his sperm over them. In the vast majority of species, the male climbs on top of the female in a position called amplexus and sprays his sperm over the eggs as she lays them in the water. The female is generally larger than the male so that she can support him. In species where the female does not carry the male during mating, they are often the same size. There are also exceptions to the rule - my pet frog Gargantua (who died last year) was a Common Green Tree Frog or White's Tree Frog (Litoria caerulea) and he was fourteen centimetres from nose to vent, longer than any female I have ever handled. He squashed a few girls, but they all survived. So did a large number of his offspring.