They develop in water, with some exceptions. Some salamanders are live-bearing and some frogs have a larval stadium that develops inside the egg.
Tadpoles.
Egg -> tadpole -> frog (Note, most fail to develop properly.)
Egg -> tadpole -> frog (Note, most fail to develop properly.)
A tadpole is a young frog that has yet to develop into an adult frog.
Frogs don't need have their offspring develop inside them. So if you were to dissect a frog you would not find the uterus because frogs release sperm and eggs to develop outside the body. Technically, the uterus is the outer shell of the egg...
They copulate.
Bullfrogs take the longest to develop.
Bullfrogs take the longest to develop.
Some rainforest frogs do not need water for their offspring. They lay their eggs in a moist environment and the little frogs develop completely in the egg, without a freeliving larval stage.
Egg -> tadpole -> frog (Note, most fail to develop properly.)
no.
In a pouch mainly.
That is generally true what badac claimed, however I've interbred the two species and there is offspring. I bred a male common toad with a female common frog, the offspring wasn't natural at all. The offspring resulted as a tadpole with tiny legs, only two survived and i released the frog,toad and frogtoads back into the wild. Conclusion- A frog and toad can mate but only in captivity, also they need to be similar e.g. treefrog toad and frog, common toad and frog.