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frog
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frog

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Wallace's flying frog, found in the rainforest of South East Asia, glides from tree to tree. Its feet are greatly enlarged with webs between the toes. When launched into the air, it extends its toes to form parachutes. Flaps of skin along the body and limbs assist the glide.
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Tree frogs have adhesive toe pads that allow them to adhere to the undersides of leaves and crawl up vertical surfaces. Although most tree frogs live and feed in trees, the majority descend to water to breed.
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A front view of the very brightly-coloured tomato frog, its colour being a signal of its toxicity. This one is on the island of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, where many primitive species have been able to survive because of the very isolated location of the island.
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The life cycle of a frog. Frogs lay their eggs (spawn) in fresh, still water. The tadpoles hatch within about two weeks and then over the course of the next three months they grow larger and slowly develop legs and internal gills. By the time they lose their tails they resemble tiny adult frogs and can leave the water.
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The frog is an unusual vertebrate in that it has no ribs.

Any amphibian of the order Anura (Greek ‘tailless’). There are about 24 different families of frog, containing more than 3,800 species. There are no clear rules for distinguishing between frogs and toads.

Frogs usually have squat bodies, with hind legs specialized for jumping, and webbed feet for swimming. Most live in or near water, though as adults they are air-breathing. A few live on land or even in trees. Their colour is usually greenish in the genus Rana, but other Ranidae are brightly coloured, for instance black and orange or yellow and white. Many use their long, extensible tongues to capture insects. The eyes are large and bulging. Frogs vary in size from the North American little grass frog Limnaoedus ocularis, 12 mm/0.5 in long, to the giant aquatic frog Telmatobius culeus, 50 cm/20 in long, of Lake Titicaca, South America. Frogs are widespread, inhabiting all continents except Antarctica, and they have adapted to a range of environments including deserts, forests, grasslands, and even high altitudes, with some species in the Andes and Himalayas existing above 5,000 m/19,600 ft.

Courtship and reproduction

In many species the males attract the females in great gatherings, usually by croaking. In some tropical species, the male's inflated vocal sac may exceed the rest of his body in size. Other courtship ‘lures’ include thumping on the ground and ‘dances’.

Some lay eggs in large masses (spawn) in water. The jelly surrounding the eggs provides support and protection and retains warmth. Some South American frogs build mud-pool ‘nests’, and African tree frogs make foam nests from secreted mucus. In other species, the eggs may be carried in pockets on the mother's back, brooded by the male in his vocal sac or, as with the Eurasian midwife toad Alytes obstetricans, wrapped round the male's hind legs until hatching.

Life cycle

The tadpoles hatch from the eggs in about a fortnight. At first they are fishlike animals with external gills and a long swimming tail, but no limbs. The first change to take place is the disappearance of the external gills and the development of internal gills, which are still later supplanted by lungs. The hind legs appear before the front legs, and the last change to occur is the diminution and final disappearance of the tail. The tadpole stage lasts about three months. At the end of this time the animal leaves the water. Some species, such as the edible frog, are always aquatic. By autumn the frog grows big and sluggish. It stores fat in a special gland in the abdomen; it is this fat that it lives on during hibernation.

Species

Certain species of frog have powerful skin poisons (alkaloids) to deter predators. ‘True frogs’ are placed in the worldwide family Ranidae, with 800 species, of which the genus Rana is the best known. The North American bullfrog Rana catesbeiana, with a croak that carries for miles, is able to jump nine times its own length. The flying frogs, genus Rhacophorus, of Malaysia, using webbed fore and hind feet, can achieve a 12 m/40 ft glide. The hairy frog Astylosternus robustus is found in West Africa; it has long outgrowths on its flanks, which seem to aid respiration. A four-year rainforest study in eastern Madagascar revealed 106 new frog species in 1995. Indian zoologists discovered the first known leaf-eating frog in 1996, in Tamil Nadu, southern India. R. hexadactyla feeds mainly on leaves, flowers, and algae. New species are constantly being discovered. In 1997 a species Eleutherodactylus pluvicanorus was discovered in Bolivia; it is 4 cm long and ground-dwelling.

Threat of extinction

Fourteen species of frog have disappeared from Australian rainforest between 1979 and1994. Frogs at higher altitudes have declined significantly worldwide. Australian biologists suggested in 1995 that a virus called iridovirus may be responsible.

US palaeontologists dated the earliest known fossil of a true frog in 1995; Prosalirus bitis is 190 million years old.



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