well tadpoles hatch in around 1 week after they have been laid (but in some frogs it can take longer).Tadpoles stay tadpoles for around three weeks but once again it can take longer in some frogs and it also depends on the water they live in and the food they consume hope this helps byeee.
Around a minute or 2
because it hasn't developed lungs yet
Tadpoles live in water, as they develop they grow legs and lungs which then allow the to live on land, as adult amphibians.
Was in water. And is now on land. Ex: a frog. A tadpole live in the water first. Then it grows and lives on land.
Leopard frogs may live up to 9 years in the wild, although very few leopard frogs will live for this long. Most mortality occurs as a tadpole or newly transformed froglet, when as many as 95% will die.
over time from the day the tadpole is born it changes into a frog. when they are a tadpole they live in the water until they are a complete frog. then the adult frog lives on land from now on
no,but its a perfect example of evolution.1.the tadpole is like a fish, having gills and fins,it slowly grows legs and the gills fade away and turns into a frog.so a baby frog turning into an adult is like a fish evolveing into a amphibian over time a long time:)
The first difference is that a tadpole (after being hatched) has gills because its body has not developed enough muscular structure to survive on land, so it live underwater, the frog however breaths through lungs (mature frogs cannot breath underwater). Second, a tadpole has a tail, while a frog is tailless. Third, a tadpole does not have any legs (until later in life) while a frog has very long hind legs for leaping.
well the "tadpole" never dies. it becomes a frog.. lool
YEAH
At birth, a tadpole is essentially a head with eyes and a tail. Many internal changes must occur before a tadpole is ready to be a land dwelling frog. As a tadpole grows, she will develop bones. The tadpole must also grow some new internal organs, the most important of which are the lungs, and a fully grown heart.
I wouldn't risk it. betas live alone, and most betas will kill company. buy a separate fish bowl, appropriate for the tadpole when it is older, and larger. :)
1. They live in both land and water 2. They both have long life spans of thirty to forty years 3. Their eggs look the same 4. They take the same time for a tadpole to become a frog or a toad