It is attached to the front of the mouth, which means the frog can flick its tongue out further to capture prey.
to catch its food
The sticky tongue on the front of their mouth.
Every animal which has a tongue has a tongue better designed for the type of food it eats. It goes with the territory. It's not just frogs. It's cows and people and cats and the spiny anteater.
they get them with their tongue and don't bother asking again
Frogs use their sticky tongue to capture prey around by bringing out the tongue and flies fly on it not knowing its a trap,and when the frogs has watch them drew in the tongue fast,and also they uses their saliva as an agent to get food because of their poisonous saliva.
Because they can grab insects & etc.
AnswerHuman tongues are attached to the back of the mouth and we can only poke them out a short way.A frog has it's tongue attached at the front of the mouth, which means that it can put its tongue out much further. This is an advantage because most frogs eat flies and insects and the like. Because they can flick their tongue a long way out they are able to catch food more effectively. This is an example of an adaptation.
because it is sticky and that is what the sticky part is for
Its muscles cause it to curl up into his mouth. The tongue sits at the front of the mouth, rolled up, when not in use. Point worth noting: Not all frogs have long tongues. Ground frogs that eat ants etc. that are close to them do not.
there teeth,tongue
dog cat
Frogs use the muscles of their eyes and pull their eyeballs down which pushes the pray down. The tongue is rather used for catching and holding the pray. Tongueless frogs (Pipidae) push their food in their mouth with there front legs. This looks strange, as the frogs 'eats with his hands'.