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Most frogs cannot survive in salt water because their skin is permeable to salt, which can dehydrate their bodies. Some species, like the crab-eating frog, have adapted to tolerate brackish water, but true saltwater is typically harmful to frogs.
Most frogs cannot live in salt water, because it will dehydrate and kill them, but there are a very few frogs that have adaptations that allow them to be exceptions:Crab-eating frogsAfrican clawed frogsSouthern leopard frogs
Common salt kills a frog. Just pour some salt on the frogs back and see what happens. people kill frogs. just like people kill people. salt does not kill a frog .it just agitates them and make them go all crazy.
Rock salt will definitely repel any frog. This is because the rock salt will threaten to draw all of the moisture out of a frog's skin and kill it.
No, salt is composed of sodium and chloride.
Frogs are freshwater animals. The saltwater would kill the eggs and, if they survived, it would kill the tadpoles, dehydrating them.Also, not all species of frogs lay their eggs in water, e.g. the Corroboree frog does not.Also, frogs of the genus Pristimantis lay their eggs on land, where they do not undergo a tadpole stage, hatching as fully metamorphosed baby frogs. Some species of frogs even give birth to live young, such as members of the African genus Nectophrynoides and other species found in the Andes and Central America.
Potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7) is a basic salt.
Yes, cats are known to hunt and kill frogs.
No, potassium chloride is not an acid. It is a salt composed of potassium and chloride ions.
Salt will actually work as a deterrent for frogs in a garden. The salt makes their feet uncomfortable and they move away from the area.
Sodium Chloride or (NaCl) is regular table salt. This is what we eat. Potassium Chloride HCL (Hydrochloride) is Potassium Salt with a Salt Base. Any time you see something labeled HCl it means it had a Hydrochloride base (Hydrogen + Chloride)
Frogs are not adapted to live in salt water.