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.
Frogs are not adapted to live in salt water.
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.
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carrrots
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
Seahorses are salt water and frogs are fresh water, there are special aquariums for salt water fish type creatures.
I know for a fact that salt does indeed affect frogs; from my observations it appears as though the salt burns the frogs and they will run off in search of water to wash the salt away. As to exactly how it works...I currently am researching that answer myself.
Considering frogs cannot live in salt water I would say nothing in the ocean eats frogs.
no there are no tadpoles in the coral reef they can not live in salt water
Frogs do not live in beaches. They need fresh water. The ocean contains salt water, which would be harmful to frogs.
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.
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.