Do all frogs start out as tadpoles?
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Tadpoles of most frog species require a persistent water source to survive; avoiding the free-living tadpole stage by letting embryos develop within the mother, or by having eggs that don't hatch until the offspring is fully developed, may therefore allow species to occupy drier environments.
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here is ur answer...
Tadpoles of most frog species require a persistent water source to survive; avoiding the free-living tadpole stage by letting embryos develop within the mother, or by having eggs that don't hatch until the offspring is fully developed, may therefore allow species to occupy drier environments.
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Answer:-
• Yes, By Process of Developing Frogs
• Frogs lay eggs in water, and the eggs hatch into tadpoles that grow into frogs.
• Once hatched, tadpoles take about 14 weeks to transform into tiny frogs. Toad tadpoles take a little bit longer, becoming toadlets after about two months.
• They develop back legs first, then front legs, while the tadpole's tail shrinks and its body becomes less rounded. They also develop lungs and eardrums.
• All frogs reproduce sexually, and all hatch from eggs. In almost all frogs, egg fertilization happens outside the female's body instead of inside.
• The female releases her eggs and the male releases his sperm at the same time.
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