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"Amphibian" comes from the Greek meaning "both
life". Amphibians can live on water and on land. |
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Scientist infer that amphibians evolved from lobe-finned
fishes called crossopterygians. |
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Amphibians enter a state of dormancy or torpor when conditions are
unfavorable.
They often bury themselves in mud or leaves, emerging when conditions are
better. |
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Hibernation
when it occurs in the winter |
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Estivation when it occurs in the summer |
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Anura –
Frogs & Toads |
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Urodela
– Salamanders |
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Trachystoma – Mud eels |
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Apoda -
Caecillians |
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Some aquatic amphibians (mud eels & sirens)
belong to the Order Trachystoma ("rough mouth") |
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These
legless wormlike creatures average 30 cm long, but they can be up to 1.3m
long. |
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They
have very small eyes and are often blind. |
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They eat
worms and other invertebrates |
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The Order Trachystoma contains three living
species of mud eels, or sirens. |
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Sirens live in the eastern United States and
northeastern Mexico. |
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The frog's powerful hind legs are equally
effective in jumping or swimming. On land frogs sit with their hind legs
folded against the body, poised to jump at the first sign of danger. |
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Most frogs can make leaps many times their body
length |
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Eyelids that can blink protect the frog's eyes
from dust and dehydration |
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In addition to upper and lower eyelids, a third,
transparent eyelid called a nictitating membrane covers each eyeball and
joins the lower eyelid |
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This membrane keeps the eyelid moist and
protects it when it is under water |
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The frog's thick, moist skin serves two
important functions— respiration and protection |
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Glands secrete mucus to keep it from drying up |
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The frog's spine has nine vertebrae |
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The cervical vertebra at the anterior end of the
spine allows neck movement that helps frogs catch prey |
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Posterior to this are seven trunk vertebrae, and
then a single sacral vertebra that supports the hind legs |
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A long, slim bone called the urostyle extends
from the sacral vertebra |
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Bones of the pectoral girdle, which form the
shoulders, connect to the front legs |
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They also provide the primary protection to the
internal organs, since the frog has no ribs |
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The pelvic girdle connects to the hind legs |
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Most frogs feed on insects, and their digestive
system is adapted to their diet |
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A frog's tongue is an excellent insect catcher. The
frog simply flicks out its long sticky tongue, curls it around its prey,
and pulls the insect back into its mouth. Then the frog snaps its mouth
shut and swallows. |
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Frogs have two types of teeth that hold on to
prey. A row of maxillary teeth line the perimeter of the upper jaw. Two
patches of vomerine teeth project from bones in the roof of the mouth. |
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Sometimes the frog blinks, pulls its eyes
inward, and presses them against the roof of its mouth. This action helps
push the food down its throat |
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Digestion in frogs takes place in the alimentary
canal, which includes the esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large
intestine, and cloaca |
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An adaptation to the greater oxygen needs of
land animals is a more efficient circulatory system than the fish's
two-chambered heart. |
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The amphibian's three-chambered heart partially
mixes oxygenated with deoxygenated blood and pumps the blood throughout the
body at higher pressure than does the fish's heart |
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The left atrium receives oxygenated blood from
the lungs, and the right atrium receives deoxygenated blood from the body. |
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Both the atria empty into the ventricle, the
main pumping chamber of the heart. |
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In the ventricle oxygenated and deoxygenated
blood mix partially and are pumped to the lungs and the rest of the body. |
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From the right atrium the blood enters the
single ventricle. The ventricle then contracts, pumping some blood to the
lungs to receive oxygen and some to the rest of the body. |
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The blood going to the body leaves the ventricle
through the conus arteriosus, a large vessel that lies against the front
side of the heart |
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This vessel divides into a right and a left
truncus arteriosus, which immediately branch again into three arches that
carry blood to various parts of the body. |
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Deoxygenated blood travels in veins back to the
right atrium from the various regions of the body. |
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Oxygenated blood returns from the lungs to the
left atrium via the pulmonary veins |
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Tadpoles respire, or exchange carbon dioxide and
oxygen, through gills |
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Adult frogs lose the gills but can respire in
three ways: through the lungs, through the skin, and through the mouth. |
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Respiration through the lungs is called
pulmonary respiration. |
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A frog breathes by changing the volume and
pressure of air in its mouth while either opening or closing its nostrils |
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Air moves from the throat to the lungs through a
slit-like passage called the glottis. |
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Because the frog's lungs are small, cutaneous
respiration, or respiration through the skin in both air and water, is very
important, especially during estivation or hibernation. |
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Oxygen can diffuse across the lining of the
mouth and into the blood. |
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Frogs
use mouth breathing for only a relatively small amount of their respiration. |
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Urine and wastes from the digestive system are
eliminated through the anus. |
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When a frog is in water, its permeable skin
allows the water to enter its body. |
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Frogs that live primarily in water rid themselves of excess water by excreting
a large volume of very dilute urine. |
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Frogs
that live mainly on land conserve water by producing a small volume of more
concentrated urine. |
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Amphibians
eliminate two primary types of metabolic waste products—carbon dioxide from
respiration and waste compounds from the breakdown of foods. |
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Are the primary excretory organs and lie on
either side of the spine against the dorsal body wall. The kidneys filter
nitrogenous wastes from the blood |
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The frog brain is more complex than the fish
brain, enabling the frog to contend with a more varied environment. |
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The optic lobes, which control vision, lie
behind the cerebrum. |
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The
cerebellum, a small band of tissue lying at right angles to the long axis
of the brain, is the center of balance and coordination. |
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The medulla oblongata lies at the back of the
brain and joins the spinal cord. It controls organ functions. |
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Ten
pairs of cranial nerves extend out directly from the brain. |
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The spinal cord transmits signals from all parts
of the body to the brain and from the brain back to the body. |
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The spinal nerves branch from the spinal cord to
various parts of the body. |
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Both male and female frogs have internal sex
organs |
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The male frog's foreleg muscles and first
fingers swell |
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These swellings help the male maintain his grasp
on the female |
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The reproductive system of the male frog
includes two bean-shaped creamy white or yellowish testes located near the
kidneys |
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Sperm cells develop in the testes and pass
through tubes to the kidneys and urinary ducts |
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Female frogs a pair of large, lobed ovaries
containing thousands of tiny immature eggs lie near the kidneys |
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During the breeding season eggs enlarge, mature,
and burst through the thin ovarian walls into the body cavity. |
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They remain in structures called ovisacs until
ovulation is complete and then leave the body through the cloacae opening. |
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The vast majority of eggs and tadpoles are eaten
by predators such as fish, birds, snakes, and turtles. Some species of
frogs have |
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The vast majority of eggs and tadpoles are eaten
by predators such as fish, birds, snakes, and turtles. |
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Newly hatched tadpoles live off yolk stored in
their bodies. They gradually grow larger and develop three pairs of gills. |
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Tadpoles have a two-chambered heart. Tadpoles
can also regenerate injured or lost body parts such as a leg or tail. |
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Legs grow from the body, and the tail
disappears. |
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The mouth broadens, developing teeth and jaws. A
saclike bladder in the throat divides into two sacs that become lungs. The
heart develops a third chamber. |
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A hormone called thyroxin circulates throughout
the bloodstream and stimulates metamorphosis. |
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The cells of the tadpole are genetically
programmed to respond to thyroxin at the appropriate stage of development. |
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