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Frogs are amphibians that can live on land and in freshwater, with the common species in India being Rana tigrina. They exhibit unique adaptations such as camouflage, a well-developed excretory system, and specialized respiratory methods for both aquatic and terrestrial environments. Frogs play a crucial role in the ecosystem by controlling insect populations and serving as a food source in the food chain.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views

Frog copy

Frogs are amphibians that can live on land and in freshwater, with the common species in India being Rana tigrina. They exhibit unique adaptations such as camouflage, a well-developed excretory system, and specialized respiratory methods for both aquatic and terrestrial environments. Frogs play a crucial role in the ecosystem by controlling insect populations and serving as a food source in the food chain.

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innbaker3
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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FROG

INTRODUCTION

• Frogs can live both on land and in freshwater and belong to class

Amphibia of phylum Chordata.


• The most common species of frog found in India is Rana tigrina.
• They do not have constant body temperature i.e., their body temperature
varies with the temperature of the environment. Such animals are called
cold blooded or poikilotherms.
• change in the colour of the frogs while they are in grasses and on dry land.
They have the ability to change the colour to hide them from their enemies
(camouflage). This protective coloration is called mimicry
• They shelter in deep burrows to protect them from extreme heat and cold.
This is known as summer sleep (aestivation) and winter sleep (hibernation)
respectively.
MORPHOLOGY 3

o The skin is smooth and slippery due to the presence of mucus. The skin is
always maintained in a moist condition.
o The colour of dorsal side of body is generally olive green with dark
irregular spots.
o the ventral side the skin is uniformly pale yellow. Frog absorbs water
through skin
o Body of a frog is divisible into head and trunkA neck and tail are absent.
o Above the mouth, a pair of nostrils is present.
o Eyes are bulged and covered by a nictitating membrane that protects them
while in water. On either side of eyes a membranous tympanum (ear)
receives sound signals.
o The forelimbs and hind limbs help in swimming, walking, leaping and
burrowing. The hind limbs end in five digits and they are larger and
muscular than fore limbs that end in four digits. Feet have webbed digits
that help in swimming.
o Frogs exhibit sexual dimorphism.
o Male frogs can be distinguished by the presence of sound producing vocal
sacs and also a copulatory pad on the first digit of the fore limbs which are
absent in female frogs.
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ANATOMY 5

• The body cavity of frogs accommodate different organ systems such as digestive, circulatory,
respiratory, nervous, excretory and reproductive systems with well developed structures and
functions
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM 6

• The digestive system consists of alimentary canal and digestive glands.


• The alimentary canal is short because frogs are carnivores and hence the length of
intestine is reduced.
• The mouth opens into the buccal cavity that leads to the oesophagus through
pharynx. Oesophagus is a short tube that opens into the stomach which in turn
continues as the intestine, rectum and finally opens outside by the cloaca.
• Liver secretes bile that is stored in the gall bladder. Pancreas, a digestive gland
produces pancreatic juice containing digestive enzymes.
• Food is captured by the bilobed tongue. Digestion of food takes place by the action
of HCl and gastric juices secreted from the walls of the stomach.
• Partially digested food called chyme is passed from stomach to the first part of the
small intestine, the duodenum.
• The duodenum receives bile from gall bladder and pancreatic juices from the
pancreas through a common bile duct.
• Bile emulsifies fat and pancreatic juices digest carbohydrates and proteins. Final
digestion takes place in the intestine.
• Digested food is absorbed by the numerous finger-like folds in the inner wall of
intestine called villi and microvilli.
• The undigested solid waste moves into the rectum and passes out through cloaca.
7
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM 8

• Frogs respire on land and in the water by two


different methods. In water, skin acts as aquatic
respiratory organ (cutaneous respiration).
• Dissolved oxygen in the water is exchanged
through the skin by diffusion.
• On land, the buccal cavity, skin and lungs act as
the respiratory organs.
• The respiration by lungs is called pulmonary
respiration.
• The lungs are a pair of elongated, pink coloured
sac-like structures present in the upper part of the
trunk region (thorax).
• Air enters through the nostrils into the buccal
cavity and then to lungs
• . During aestivation and hibernation gaseous
exchange takes place through skin.
9
VASCULAR SYSTEM
• The vascular system of frog is well-developed closed type.
• Frogs have a lymphatic system also. The blood vascular system involves heart, blood
vessels and blood.
• The lymphatic system consists of lymph, lymph channels and lymph nodes. Heart is a
muscular structure situated in the upper part of the body cavity.
• It has three chambers, two atria and one ventricle and is covered by a membrane
called pericardium. A triangular structure called sinus venosus joins the right atrium. It
receives blood through the major veins called vena cava
• .The ventricle opens into a sac- like conus arteriosus on the ventral side of the heart.
The blood from the heart is carried to all parts of the body by the arteries (arterial
system).
• The veins collect blood from different parts of body to the heart and form the venous
system. Special venous connection between liver and intestine as well as the kidney
and lower parts of the body are present in frogs.
• The former is called hepatic portal system and the latter is called renal portal system.
The blood is composed of plasma and cells. The blood cells are RBC (red blood cells)
or erythrocytes, WBC (white blood cells) or leucocytes and platelets. RBC’s are
nucleated and contain red coloured pigment namely haemoglobin.
• The lymph is different from blood. It lacks few proteins and RBCs. The blood carries
nutrients, gases and water to the respective sites during the circulation. The circulation
of blood is achieved by the pumping action of the muscular heart.
11
EXCRETORY SYSTEM
• The elimination of nitrogenous wastes is carried out
by a well developed excretory system.
• The excretory system consists of a pair of kidneys,
ureters, cloaca and urinary bladder.
• These are compact, dark red and bean like structures
situated a little posteriorly in the body cavity on both
sides of vertebral column.
• Each kidney is composed of several structural and
functional units called uriniferous tubules or
nephrons. Two ureters emerge from the kidneys in
the male frogs.
• The ureters act as urinogenital duct which opens into
the cloaca. In females the ureters and oviduct open
seperately in the cloaca.
• The thin-walled urinary bladder is present ventral to
the rectum which also opens in the cloaca.
• The frog excretes urea and thus is a ureotelic animal.
Excretory wastes are carried by blood into the kidney
where it is separated and excreted.
13
CONTROL AND COORDINATION
• The system for control and coordination is highly evolved in the
frog. It includes both neural system and endocrine glands.
• The chemical coordination of various organs of the body is
achieved by hormones which are secreted by the endocrine
glands.
• The prominent endocrine glands found in frog are pituitary,
thyroid, parathyroid, thymus, pineal body, pancreatic islets,
adrenals and gonads.
• The nervous system is organised into a central nervous system
(brain and spinal cord), a peripheral nervous system (cranial
and spinal nerves) and an autonomic nervous system
(sympathetic and parasympathetic).
• There are ten pairs of cranial nerves arising from the brain.
Brain is enclosed in a bony structure called brain box (cranium).
The brain is divided into fore-brain, mid-brain and hind-brain.
• Forebrain includes olfactory lobes, paired cerebral hemispheres
and unpaired diencephalon. The midbrain is characterised by a
pair of optic lobes.
• Hind-brain consists of cerebellum and medulla oblongata.
• The medulla oblongata passes out through the foramen
magnum and continues into spinal cord, which is enclosed in
the vertebral column.
15
SENSE ORGAN
• Frog has different types of sense organs, namely
organs of touch (sensory papillae), taste (taste buds),
smell (nasal epithelium), vision (eyes) and hearing
(tympanum with internal ears).
• Out of these, eyes and internal ears are well-organised
structures and the rest are cellular aggregations around
nerve endings.
• Eyes in a frog are a pair of spherical structures situated
in the orbit in skull. These are simple eyes (possessing
only one unit).
• External ear is absent in frogs and only tympanum can
be seen externally. The ear is an organ of hearing as
well as balancing (equilibrium).
REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM 18

• Frogs have well organised male and female reproductive systems.


• Male reproductive organs consist of a pair of yellowish ovoid testes (Figure 7.3), which are
found adhered to the upper part of kidneys by a double fold of peritoneum called
mesorchium.
• Vasa efferentia are 10-12 in number that arise from testes. They enter the kidneys on their
side and open into Bidder’s canal.
• Finally it communicates with the urinogenital duct that comes out of the kidneys and opens
into the cloaca.
• The cloaca is a small, median chamber that is used to pass faecal matter, urine and sperms
to the exterior.

IN FEMALE
• The female reproductive organs include a pair of ovaries (Figure 7.4). The ovaries are
situated near kidneys and there is no functional connection with kidneys.
• A pair of oviduct arising from the ovaries opens into the cloaca separately. A mature female
can lay 2500 to 3000 ova at a time. Fertilisation is external and takes place in water
• . Development involves a larval stage called tadpole. Tadpole undergoes metamorphosis to
form the adult.
19
20

Frogs are beneficial for mankind


because they eat insects and
protect the crop. Frogs maintain
ecological balance because these
serve as an important link of food
chain and food web in the
ecosystem. In some countries the
muscular legs of frog are used as
food by man.

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