yes but you cant let the water get too Merci or they will die and don't use tap water to change it because it has chlorine in it use the water you found them in and make sure they have a little bit of allege at the bottom usually they eat allege and also you can feed
yes, i think so, cause if you take it away, it will eat you ;D
well tadpoles hatch in around 1 week after they have been laid (but in some frogs it can take longer).Tadpoles stay tadpoles for around three weeks but once again it can take longer in some frogs and it also depends on the water they live in and the food they consume hope this helps byeee.
No, they cannot take care of themselves. They do in their natural wildlife habitat after they have been born, but if you take them home? No. If you take 1 or 2 home, you would need to look up how to take care of them. Currently I have a tadpole that is pretty new. I am looking for answers on how to take care of it, and so far I am not doing that great. But to answer your question, it depends if you mean in the wild or taking them home.
you take out your tadpoles and put them in another tank and then you put the water in the tank that you just took the tadpoles out of by Awesome Girl
Frog spawn typically hatches into tadpoles within 6 to 21 days, depending on the species and environmental conditions such as temperature and water quality. Warmer temperatures generally accelerate the hatching process. After hatching, tadpoles can take several weeks to months to develop into adult frogs, depending on the species and habitat.
I dont think so lions are natural carnivores you may be able to train one but when you go to sleep you never know what can happen.
Yes, if you put it in the right environment. But it would be better to observe it from it's natural habitat. But don't take it out of it's natural habitat and bring it to a lab. Hope this helped you. :)
Its important because if we take all their habitat, the animals won't have a place to live any more. Also, for animals who only have one type and species of plant or animal they can eat, and if their natural habitat, probably the only place with that food, is taken away, the animal will become extinct from starvation. And the the values of the natural habitat and the biodiversity will be destroyed. There might also even be a mass extinction of that particular group that species belongs to.
take a lot of natural tree branches and leaves to make it look as natural as possible and keep it clean.
Cane toads (Bufo marinus) in the wild can live up to ten years. In captivity they can live up to about eight years.
give it meat and take it to its home,and if he or she is hurt the take it to the health care.
It depends on the species. In Australia, where I live, there are frogs that live in the desert, with amazingly fast-growing tadpoles that mature in a week, before the water can dry up. Some species of bullfrog, however, may take three or four years.