I like to use a higher powered air soft gun if you don't have that then rocks will work. You have to be really sneaky though. That or "cheat." Most frog gigging is done at night with a frog "gig" (a spear like tool, 3 feet or longer with one, two, or more spikes at the end) and a flashlight. Shining a light in a frog's eyes at night tends to mesmerize them, so you can get closer.
12 gauge shotgun
tree frogs are dark green
Most substances foreign to frogs are harmful or lethal.
not all frogs are green some are brown.
No, photosynthetis is known from plants and in some animal life but not in frogs.
Frogs can not live in salt water. The salt will kill them. don't ask me why.
Grass frogs are green or light brown.
tree frogs are dark green
because frogs in the 1789 were yellow and when they were tadpoles they were green but now the frogs are green and the tadpoles are yellow and toads are a yellow greeny coulor so that why frogs are green because toads are yellow and frogs are green because the people who invented frogs and toads didnt want to be the same coulor.
the frogs can't be camouflaged because no green matches frogs. or different colours for the other frogs.
frogs get there name from the caveman
Yes, green tree frogs are vertebrates, which mean they have a backbone.
Depending on the age you start to breed green frogs.
no, not tree frogs, but some other frogs can be like that
No, snails don't kill frogs they actual help frogs by eating harmful bacteria.
green dotty frogs
insects and other frogs
No. No frogs are green. Frogs have no green pigmentation in their skin at all. Like mammals, they are unable to produce green pigment. Mammals, reptiles and amphibians can only produce black and yellow-red pigment, and all colours and patterns on a frog's skin are the result of different combinations of these two pigments. Frogs contain variations of the yellow-red pigment. Most species of frogs appear green because of the pattern of refraction of blue light by special cells in their skin blending in with this yellow pigment. To answer the question - green frogs are not completely green when they developing. The green colouring becomes more pronounced as they grow.