Living things have not been 'made' by someone for a 'purpose', that is the wrong way to think about life. Things living on the planet now, have evolved to do so over thousands of millions of years and are therefore part of the web of life on our planet. It is our planet that is alive (the biosphere) and living things thrive or die out as random changes affect the biosphere and the DNA that encodes for living things.
Frogs serve many purposes. They eat annoying flies and are often used as a source of food for other animals such as snakes. Scientists have also studied frogs for use in cloning research.
Basicly African clawed frogs are bigger and have tiny claws and regular frogs are just frogs i suppose.
frogs are not herbivores. so, no.
fish breathe through their gills. frogs breathe through their legs while in water.
No. Frogs are amphibians.
Frogs hop, toads run or walk is a quick visual clue Frogs long strong legs Frogs jump and toads walk or run
it is the frogs bones.
It has no purpose.
Animals eat to get energy and nutrients to live. If frogs died when they ate, it would defeat the purpose. So no, frogs do not die when they eat.
The Maxillary teeth in frogs hold prey.
for the poison to make poison darts
The economic importance of frogs is found in the medical field. Frogs are used to make some types of medication and thus can be sold for this purpose.
if u are doing a project on frogs
Well first think of a spider. if a horsefly were to land in its web the spider would eat it. so 'I'm thinking it only serves as food for other things like frogs and Spiders etc. Which now leads us to the next question.....whats the purpose of frogs, spiders, etc.
because frogs are green and apples are green, apples have pips inside the pips are smaller cells and in those cells are a nucleus therfore frogs need to have a nucleus
fish breathe through their gills. frogs breathe through their legs while in water.
fish breathe through their gills. frogs breathe through their legs while in water.
No, there are female frogs and male frogs.