no they eat them
no the African clawed frog spends 95% of its time in water. red eared slidars are only semi aquatic. as for the leopard frogs i would say yes just take extra caution when housing multiple animals together!
They are small (dwarf) and are native to Africa.They are technically African dwarf frogs.
Yes, but Dwarf Frogs do best with just other dwarf frogs, or docile community fish.
African Dwarf frogs eat their skin to get the protein they need
A temperature of between 70F and 80F is ideal for African dwarf frogs.
African Dwarf Frogs live at the bottom so prey cannot get them.
No they do not.
When I initially put dwarf frogs into my tank with blood parrot cichlids, the fish attempted to bite onto the feet of the frogs thinking it was food, or something. After the first day they left each other alone and there have been no problems since then.
No, dwarf frogs spend their time wisly. They have hobbies like swimming, catching food and sleeping.
I am not sure. I used to have two African Dwarf frogs and they lived together in harmony for two or three years. One sad day, one of the frogs died. The other frog stayed in the same place and was very depressed (or so it seemed). A few days later, he was dead. :(
In a way, yes. Turtles, sliders included, that mud up during the winter will 'inhale' water into the cloaca where oxygen transfer can occur. That seems every bit as valid a means of breathing as when frogs breathe through their skin. Like any other air-breathing animal, if they inhale water into their lungs, they drown.