the legs come out
.To the frog, which part is not important?
tadpole to frogThis is called metamorphosis. You all just need to get a lyffe! joke! i love science!The term 'Maturation' should also apply.I think also that there is another term...When a tadpole turns into a frog, we call it metamorphosis, or the process of transformation from an immature amphibian form to an adult form in two or more distinct stages.
No part of the tadpole falls of. The tadpole grows legs and then the tail shrinks. It doesn't fall off.
They lose their tail, gills, gill pouch, and part of their intestines.
a female frog lays eggs in water .when the eggs hatching tiny tadpoles come out which looks like fishes .after a few weeks the tadpoles start to grow logs .their tails becomes shorter and shorter and Finlay , disappear .after sometime they change into adult frogs
No, a tadpole is the larva of frogs, which makes it technically an amphibian. It is, even though it lives in water and has gills. Anyway, it's not a mammal because 1.) It doesn't have hair/fur, 2.) It doesn't have its young live, 3.) it doesn't feed its young with milk. Hope this helps, User Ameobea The Tadpole is the young of the frog which is an amphibian. Although, by definition, an amphibian is capable of living in & out of water but returns to water to spawn, the tadpole does neither. It does not spawn until it has developed into a mature adult (frog) and nor can it survive out of water. A mammal on the otherhand is defined by that fact that it gives birth to a live youngster which is, for all intents and purposes, a replica of it's parents.
amphibians breath with the help of both gills and lungs. example frog. frog in its larval stage is called a tadpole and its respiratory organ is gills. in its later stages of life (adult) its respiratory organs changes into lungs
any animal that is required by its life cycle to spend part of its life in water and part on land. Think frog. Begins life in water as tadpole, then continues to land, then back to water for reproduction.
im pretty sure it is duodenum
The water world
Tadpoles and frogs differ primarily in their physical form and life stage. Tadpoles are aquatic, have a streamlined body, a long tail, and breathe through gills, while frogs are terrestrial, possess limbs for jumping, and breathe through lungs. Additionally, tadpoles primarily feed on algae, whereas adult frogs are carnivorous and consume insects and other small animals. This transformation from tadpole to frog is part of their life cycle, known as metamorphosis.
They all have a tail but a frog doesn't. A frog has a tail in part of its life idiot (the person who awnsered first) Its called a froglet