Adult frogs might weigh on average 0.20-6.0 grams
Not really. Poison dart frogs eat insects, and they don't need much teeth to do that.
A Poison Dart Frog weighs about two grams.
One of the most toxic poison arrow frogs is the Golden Dart Frog. Its latin name is Phillobates terribilis. There are many, many species of poison dart frogs (genii Phillobates, Dendrobates, Epipedobates among others) but P. terribilis is one of the best known. It is solid gold in colour and is a startlingly beautiful frog. There is enough toxin in the skin of one frog to kill three thousand mice.
its glass. are you stupid?
I don't know much, but the poison from the frogs were by South American and Columbian Indians to poison the tips of their blowgun darts.
Pretty much throughout the whole country.
they're almost weightless, so nothing
A poison dart frog doesn't really do much expect for eat and jump and do all the other things happy frogs like to do.
A glass frog can jump 6,975 feet high in the air and is the record for the highest jumping frog.
Poison dart frogs can carry varying amounts of toxins depending on the species and their environment. Some species, like the golden poison dart frog, possess enough batrachotoxin to potentially kill 10 adult humans. However, these frogs produce their potent toxins from their diet, primarily consisting of certain insects in the wild, and they are much less toxic when raised in captivity without these specific food sources.
Roughly between the size of a golfball and Baseball.
Yes. Frogs (and toads) have mucous glands all over their skin to help keep their skin lubricated. If frogs do not keep their skin moist they will dry out and die. In some species, such as the poison dart frogs, the secretions from these glands are highly toxic. All frogs and toads have a degree of these poisons, even if it is only in retrace amounts, but in some species the concentration of toxins is much greater, providing an effective defence mechanism. The mucous glands in frogs' and toads' skin is different from the parotid glands which some species of toads have just behind their eyes, which contain irritants and other toxins to deter predators.