as long as they want to
No, frog parents don't stay with their eggs because the eggs are laid in water and frogs cant stay in the water for too long or they will drown.
Since frogs are cold-blooded, their body temperature is the same as the air around them. Red-Eyed tree frogs will usually stay in the sun to keep warm.
According to several sources available online, red eyed tree frogs prefer to live in a community. "They are a social species, thriving in environments with two or more other red eyed tree frogs." -redeyedtreefrog.org "This species tends to do better in a community" -allaboutfrogs.org "The red eye frog prefers to live in a community" -buzzle.com
no this is myth
Most do not. These are typically R-selected species meaning that most of their energy is put into reproduction. More offspring for better chances of some surviving, and having multiple clutches per year. So how long they stay with the parents is typically zero. All are birthed from eggs, most with no parental watch over the eggs after they have been laid.
as long as they need to.
20 months
20 months
It doesn't stay with it's mother. A "baby frog" is not a frog at all. Female frogs lay eggs that are later fertilized by male frogs. These eggs then "hatch" into tadpoles - the sexually-immature stage of frogs. The mother frogs will rarely meet their offspring.
yes but cannot stay there and remain there for as long as fresh water
About 2 years
8 years