There are some species of frog which give birth to live young, rather than laying eggs, such as members of the African genus Nectophrynoides. There are also some salamanders which give birth to young which are either larvae, or already metamorphosed. Caecilians are a type of amphibian, rather like a worm, which give birth to fully metamorphosed young.
Male amphibians do not lay eggs.
All of them.
Yep
Most reptiles and all amphibians lay eggs. Some reptiles are viviparous.
A typical amphibian lives on the land until it is time to breed and lay eggs, when it returns to the water.
Most amphibians just abandon their young when they lay their eggs.
Yes, amphibians eggs have no outer coating, although they have a jelly like casing which can protect it.
because they lay eggs and they don't live in the water they live next to the water.
Reptilian eggs often have a hard or leathery shell protecting them - amphibian eggs do not. Amphibians like frogs and salamanders lay eggs that almost look like balls of gel or slime, so they must be laid somewhere moist. Because reptile eggs have a protective shell, they can be laid in more varied areas than amphibian eggs can.
An alligator is a reptile, not an amphibian.
Fish eggs and Amphibian eggs are somewhat the same except Amphibian eggs are lay-ed on a weed under the water so they don't move or get swept away by fish passing by. Fish eggs are lay-ed in a a spot where big fish who eat the usually cant get so they are safe, usually their under a rock cliff or in some coral where they can't be found. But they are almost the same size and both are lay-ed under water. By Genevieve A.
Amphibian eggs and Fish eggs are usually found with a layer of a jelly like substance coating the egg. Reptile eggs are found with an egg that is protected with a shell.
Dolphins are mammals, not amphibians, as amphibians need to be able to come onto land to breathe normally, and lay eggs. Dolphins will die on land, and don't lay eggs, just give birth in the water.