They are male toads.
Mammals, birds, and reptiles lay amniotic eggs, and frogs and toads are none of these, so, no, frogs and toads do not have amniotic eggs. Amniotic eggs contain a yolk and aid in gas and energy exchange.
No. Toads and toads lay the same number of eggs obviously....But if you mean do toads lay more eggs then frogs then yes they do.
Toads traditionally lay their eggs in the water more likely than not near the shore or close to ground.
no. most toads lay their eggs in strings.
They need to lay a lot of eggs so that if some are dead or they are eaten by predators, at least there are still some more eggs:)
In a pond
no
All toads lay eggs that are fertilized externally, most leave them in a gooey mass to hatch all on their own. However there are some kinds of toads (and frogs) that do interesting things with this egg mass. There are some that carry the eggs and the freshly hatch tadpoles around in their throat pouch. There are some that do the same with their ovi-ducts. The mid-wife toad carries its eggs around in holes in its back and goes through a sort of labour when the eggs hatch.
They lay eggs.
eyeballs
All toads are frogs and all frogs lay their eggs in clumps, so, yes!!
NO They cannot