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  2. Hydric brooding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydric_brooding

    Hydric brooding is an egg incubation practice performed by some species of frogs. It involves either placing urine from the bladder on the eggs to keep them wet or holding the body over the eggs to prevent them from drying out. [1] [2] [3] [4]

  3. Frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog

    Frogs may lay their eggs as clumps, surface films, strings, or individually. Around half of species deposit eggs in water, others lay eggs in vegetation, on the ground or in excavations. [ 136 ] [ 137 ] [ 138 ] The tiny yellow-striped pygmy eleuth ( Eleutherodactylus limbatus ) lays eggs singly, burying them in moist soil. [ 139 ]

  4. Pickerel frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pickerel_Frog

    Pickerel frog egg masses are spherical and about the same size of a wood frog egg mass—roughly 5–10 cm in diameter—although pickerel frog egg masses contain more eggs, about 2000–3000. [4] Pickerel frog eggs are multicolored: they are dark brown on top and cream colored on the bottom. The egg masses adhere to woody or herbaceous ...

  5. Climbing mantella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climbing_mantella

    Climbing mantella usually only lay one large egg (3–3.5 millimetres (0.12–0.14 in)), characteristics common among frogs with a high degree of parental care. Female frogs lay their eggs at the side of wells or above the water line, exhibiting a form of terrestrial oviposition–another indicator of high parental investment. [ 7 ]

  6. Forget eggs, frogs give birth to live tadpoles

    www.aol.com/news/2015-01-02-forget-eggs-frogs...

    These are frog eggs. This is how we're used to frogs having babies. They lay eggs, those eggs hatch into tadpoles ... and you learned the rest in science class. However, a newly discovered species ...

  7. Microhylidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microhylidae

    The two main shapes for the microhylids are wide bodies and narrow mouths and normal frog proportions. Those with narrow mouths generally eat termites and ants, and the others have diets typical of most frogs. Egg-laying habits are highly varied.

  8. Cascades frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascades_Frog

    A single female will lay up to 425 eggs at a time, but very few tadpoles will live past their first year. The placement of clusters of egg masses in shallow water soon after the first thaw can make them susceptible to freezing and pathogen transmission between clusters. The eggs hatch within eight to 20 days. Their larval period lasts 80 to 95 ...

  9. Grey foam-nest tree frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_foam-nest_tree_frog

    Egg mortality in foam nesting tree frogs remains mostly unexplored, therefore information regarding the matter is limited. Grey foam-nest tree frogs' egg mortality is considered moderate compared to other anuran species. Following the embryonic development, a tadpole breaks free and drops into the water below the foam nest.