no it would be considered an amphibian
a frog captures an insect with its long tongue and uses its hands like toddlers and swallows its prey down their long esophagus and then the stomach does the rest.
Yes, a frog is considered to be made of matter.
If the northern leopard frog went extinct, it could disrupt the balance of its ecosystems. These frogs serve as both predator and prey, their absence could lead to imbalances in local food chains. Additionally, they play a role in controlling insect populations, so their extinction could result in an increase in insect numbers.
part of a food chain with multiple trophic levels. The snake is a tertiary consumer, the frog is a secondary consumer, the insect is a primary consumer, and the plant is a producer. This exemplifies the transfer of energy through different organisms in an ecosystem.
Not much. Humans and birds can eat insects without danger.
A frog does not have a favorite state. Frogs is considered a insect.
insect.
It helps keep the insect in the mouth of the frog
Frogs lunge out their tung (their tung is quite sticky to insects) and their tong attaches to the insect then the insect get rolled up in the tong then the frog pulls in the insect and has a meal.
it's tongue
frograntula
no it is a forest amphiban
frog
The Hamilton's frog eat any small moving insect such as a fly.
A digger wasp is an insect that would dig a big mound of sand. Another possibility would be a sand flea, however it is not considered an insect.
yes i think that is how it goes in a ecological pyramid.
Insect larvae