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:)
no. most toads lay their eggs in strings.
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.
Tadpoles don't lay eggs on strings. Female frogs typically lay their eggs in water or damp places like vegetation near bodies of water. The strings you might be referring to could be frog spawn, which are clumps of eggs surrounded by jelly to protect them.
They lay very similar eggs, but it would be called toad spawn. Frogspawn is usually laid in clumps and toad spawn in strings.
no
Well, sort of.... They start out as little black dots in a jelly-like egg that is usually in a body of water. Then, they hatch into tadpoles. They tadpoles metamorphose into toads after a few weeks
They lay eggs.
All toads are frogs and all frogs lay their eggs in clumps, so, yes!!
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.
Toads don't give birth as such, they lay strings of eggs looking like small beads of clear jelly. But yeah, they (usually, depends on which specie and where it lives) lay these in water.
Tadpoles do not lay eggs at all. Tadpoles are the young frogs or toads that hatch from eggs.