About 50-300 eggs. Sometimes more!
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Yes a toad does lay eggs a toad lays eggs in long strips while a frog lays eggs in clumps. They both lay eggs in water.
Technically, zero; "incubation" is literally the period when an animal sits on its eggs, which toads do not do.
ask if a frog and a toad r the same thing, then u will know what differece is
no
Amphibians do not get pregnant, they lay eggs which are fertilised external to their bodies.
it usually takes a week for toad eggs to hatch or 36 hours for tree frog eggs to hatch.
NO THEY CAN'T! they have to have somebody to make the eggs with them!
The toad you're referring to is likely the Surinam toad (Pipa pipa). Unlike most amphibians, which lay eggs in water, the Surinam toad has a unique reproductive strategy where the female carries fertilized eggs embedded in her back skin until the tadpoles emerge. This adaptation allows her to protect the developing young from aquatic predators.
They can lay up to 60,000 eggs, which is why they are an invasive species. The average amount though is usually about 20,000. Also, just to clarify, toads don't have babies, they lay eggs, being oviparous. These eggs will hatch into tadpoles that will metamorphose into froglets.
You did not say which species of frog so I will tell you of one particular frog. The southern cricket frog of South-eastern borth America can lay as many as 250 in ditches and ponds. Most species of frogs can lay hundreds of eggs at a time.
The female Surinam toad lays her eggs in water, they are fertilized by the male and then attach to her back. The eggs form into little chambers on her back and grow until the baby frogs are fully developed. They then hatch from the mothers' back.