well like most animals frogs hibernate during the winter. most species hide under rocks and mud or burrow under the ground. when looking for them think like a frog, where would i go in the winter? though looking for frogs in the winter is much harder than the spring and summer. and is extremely rare to see them unless you REALLY LOOK.
They become ''frogsicles''(turn into ice) and unfreeze after winter and go out to search for food.
Frogs do not hybridize in winter. I do not think you know what hybridize means! I think you have confused it with hibernate?
They go into dormancey similar to hibernation but is specific to cold blooded animals.
no !
because they burry under mud and leaves in the winter
they dont come out as much
If they are in captivity then yes they will eat , but if they are wild they hibernate because it gets to cold and all the food they eat, cricketts, mealworms, and bugs, those all die or aren't around so the frogs have to hibernate or theu would most likley die.
They go into a hibernation. which is under leaves and snow which acts as an insolation. This said, it is winter all year round in Canada so our frogs don't come out of hibernation except for 2 days out of the year when the snow is only a meer 4 feet deep.
they both hibernate in the winter.
frogs often survive the brutality and harshness of winter to live another year. Even though frogs are small and delicate creatures, they are tough and hardy. So hardy, that frogs can withstand being frozen solid. To most animals, including humans, being frozen solid would mean certain death.
Frogs hiber nate because they cannot live in cold