It depends on the species. The bigger the frog the longer it takes. A tiny tree frog could take a onth or two, and a huge bullfrog could take five months.
well the "tadpole" never dies. it becomes a frog.. lool
How long has it been since you got the tadpole? Do you know it's age? Is it really a tadpole? The time it takes for a frog to undertake metamorphosis from a tadpole to a frog is about 24 hours.
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.
no it does not. it will get out of water and eventully it will lose its tail.
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.
The time for eggs to hatch varies among species, as does the time for the hatched tadpole to complete metamorphosis into an adult frog.
If taken care of properly they can live up to 5 years.
beacause the tadpole/frog is a kind of a fish and also they know how to swim.
Tadpoles are called that when the frog is first 'born'. Polliwogs are when the frog progresses and grows legs. A tadpole and polliwog is the same thing but in different stages of life.
Yes but not for long I one caught a tadpole and it breathed for 1-2 minutes then died ( sorry little tadpole) anyway I caught a half frog half tadpole and YES they can breath above water just like frogs or toads.
Depends on the species of frog, the country and the size of the body of water. Generally in America, eggs laid in a smaller body of water (a road rut) the eggs will evolve from a creature that has gills and is entirely needful of water to live into one that has no gills and is in need of lesser degrees of water, in about two-three months (green frog, pickeral frog). In a larger body of water--pond--the same species may take another month or more. The above process also depends on the water not becoming too warm or drying up or being polluted. Some species (bullfrog, in a lake ) can remain a tadpole for two years or more. The tiger salamander's tadpole (axolotl) in a lake where it is impossible to leave the water (steep shoreline) may retain its gills and breed. Some (Sumatra Toad) may carry on its metamorphosis within the parent and be born as a "baby" frog.
they look like they are half frog, half tadpole. Google them.