The amphibians of the hellbender and Asian giant salamander family are the largest living amphibians known currently. Of those, the Chinese Giant Salamander is the largest living amphibian. Although it rarely does, it has the capability of reaching six feet (1.8 meters) in length and about 24 lbs (11kg) in weight.
The largest amphibian is the Chinese giant salamander. For more information click on this link.
its is the chinese salamander it is 6 ft .
The world's the largest amphibian in the world is the Chinese Giant Salamander.
The Goliath frog is the world's biggest tailless amphibian. Chinese giant salamander is the biggest tailed amphibian. See related links for a picture of each.
Frogs and toads.
all frogs are amphibians
The biggest amphibian is the Chinese giant salamander.
Australia's largest native amphibian is the white-lipped tree frog, which is also known as the giant tree frog. It is the world's largest tree frog, growing from 10-14 cm. The cane toad, which can grow larger, is an introduced species.
No, they are spiders, among the world's largest.
himalayan toad
A Mudskipper is a FISH not a reptile or amphibian, it belongs to the gobi family witch is the largest family of fish.
The worlds fastest amphibian currently known is the Seastar. 237 kt cruise, over 2000 fpm with a Walter 601D 724 hp turbine. There is only one known plane that is currently owned by a Swede.
Gorillas are not amphibians, they are mammals. And before you ask, no they are not the largest mammal. The largest would be the blue whale
11 feet 5 yards
The largest amphibian is the Chinese Giant Salamander (Andrias davidianus.)The biggest tailless amphibian (frogs and toads) is the Goliath frog.
The largest amphibian is the Chinese giant salamander. It can grow up to 6 feet long (about 180 cm.) The smallest is a New Guinea frog that only grows up to .27 inches (about .65 cm.)
The largest amphibian is the Chinese salamander. It can weight up to 140 lbs and can be up to 6 feet long. The smallest amphibian is the paedophryne amauensis frog in Papua New Guinea. It is only 7 mm long.