It depends on the size of the cliff, for example, if the cliff is five feet high, the frog would probably jump away happily, but lets say it was 200 meters high, the frog would die on contact with the ground but with the force that is on the frog would bounce it away, so yes, in a way.
no
The scientific name of the cliff chirping frog is Eleutherodactylus marnockii.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Eleutherodactylus marnockii.
bad luck for a year. That same frog you threw will haunt you for ever
they slip threw the cage
it eats threw its mouth and shallows it hole
Is the frog poisinous? if so then the frog might be eaten and then the bear dies of poison. If the frog wasen't, then I would say the Bear
A frog that is golden.
Does he have a frog in his throat.
um...a answer would be a frog eating a fly um...a answer would be a frog eating a fly um...a answer would be a frog eating a fly
The bones that would hold the most weight in a frog would be the urostyle. This is basically the spine of the frog.
Relatively speaking, for the size of the animal compared to the height it jumps, a frog will jump higher. Kangaroos, being larger animals, naturally jump higher and further in actual distance.