“Being oviparousanamniotes, frogs typically spawn their eggs in bodies of water. The eggs then hatch into fully aquatic larvae called tadpoles, which have tails and internal gills. A few species lay eggs on land or bypass the tadpole stage altogether.”
Is that not unique in the entire world of amphibians? I was under the impression all amphibians laid eggs.
Per https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog
“Being oviparous anamniotes, frogs typically spawn their eggs in bodies of water. The eggs then hatch into fully aquatic larvae called tadpoles, which have tails and internal gills. A few species lay eggs on land or bypass the tadpole stage altogether.”
So maybe not the first, but I am no frogologist.
I believe the term is herpetologist. :)
I had to see a herpetoligist after my ex gave it to me
…oh dear…
I think you can get an OTC cream for that.
Close, but he’s actually called Herbie Tonojizz and he’s a really sweet guy who loves pineapple!
It’s a form of ovovivipary so it’s not that crazy, they basically just keep the eggs inside of them instead of laying them.
I mean, to be fair, so do humans…
No, humans use a placental system, they do not put all the energy required for the offspring into the egg initially. It’s not really the same at all.
There are also fish that give live birth, so I wouldn’t be that surprised if some amphibians do so as well
Fish are way more diverse than amphibians tho, there’s fish that breath air.
There’s also amphibians that breathe air