Some frogs can be frozen solid, then thawed, and continue living. |
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Some frogs can pull their eyes into their throat and help push food down! |
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Frogs live on all continents except Antarctica. |
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Wood frogs can be frozen solid and then thawed, and continue living. They use the glucose in their body to protect their vital organs while they are in a frozen state. |
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When threatened, the horned toad shoots blood from it's eyes. |
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Unlike a frog a toad cannot jump. |
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There is a substance in the skin of the African clawed frog that helps in fighting infection. |
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The sound made by the toadfish when mating underwater is so loud that it can be heard by humans on the shore. |
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The smallest frog is the "Brazilian baby frog", which is smaller than a dime. |
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The mating call of a male toadfish, who are underwater, is so loud that it can be heard by humans above water. |
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The fire-bellied toad has a bright red belly that it displays to predators as a defense mechanism. It is also a warning that the toad's skin is poisonous. |
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The Spring peeper (a frog) can survive the winter season with 65% of its body water as ice. |
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In 1864, A Quebec farmer found a frog inside a hailstone. |
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Frogs do not need to drink water as they absorb the water through their skin. |
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Found in Argentina, the ornate horned frog can eat an entire mouse with one swallow. |