Something that is amphibious spends part of its life as an aquatic creature and part of its life as a land creature. While there are both land and water snails, they are either one or the other and not both, so snails are not amphibious.
They do not. Instead, they feed on insects, grubs, slugs, worms, and other invertebrates like other amphibians do. But as tadpoles, the feed on plants.
Adult amphibians are meat eating predators. Their prey also includes insects, slugs, worms, and even small mammals, such as mice. Aquatic amphibians eat water snails, insects, and small fish. Many amphibians hunt at night, using their sharp sight, smell, and hearing to track victims.
Birds, amphibians, fish and reptiles all lay eggs. Monotreme mammals (the platypus and echidnae) also do this.
The pacific giant salamander east land snails, slugs, beetles, moths, flies, small mammals, mice, amphibians, small snakes and frogs
Collective nouns for slugs are a slime of slugs, a phlegm of slugs, or a cornucopia of slugs.
1. leopard slugs 2. banana slugs 3. garden slugs 4. red triangle slugs 5. black slugs 6. field slugs 7. keel slugs
No, a slug is not an amphibian; it is a mollusk. Specifically, slugs belong to the class Gastropoda, which includes snails and other similar creatures. Amphibians, such as frogs and salamanders, are vertebrates that typically undergo metamorphosis and have a life cycle that includes both aquatic and terrestrial stages. Slugs, on the other hand, are primarily terrestrial and do not undergo such transformations.
Slugs can eat parsley. Slugs can eat anything, even if it kills it.
On the contrary, chickens will eat the slugs! Chickens LOVE slugs. Unless you have monster sized slugs the size of chickens, don't worry about it.
No, slugs are multicellular organisms.
The Phylum of slugs is MOLLUSCA
where do you find slugs on the planet