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By: Anthony Rongione and Hunter Haines

Amphibians. By: Anthony Rongione and Hunter Haines. General Information. There are over 6,000 species of Amphibians. Most live in the water and land. Are ectothermic. Lay eggs in water. Includes toads, frogs, salamanders, newts, and caecilians.

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By: Anthony Rongione and Hunter Haines

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  1. Amphibians By: Anthony Rongione and Hunter Haines

  2. General Information • There are over 6,000 species of Amphibians. • Most live in the water and land. • Are ectothermic. • Lay eggs in water. • Includes toads, frogs, salamanders, newts, and caecilians. • Undergo a metamorphosis from a juvenile form that presides in water, and an adult form. • Have moist skin to help prevent dehydration and respiration.

  3. Structural Features • Posses 4 limbs (except caecilians). • Have sticky tongues to capture food. • Majority of adult amphibians have teeth. They are not used for chewing but for holding prey.

  4. Locomotion • As a tadpole or pollywog, amphibians use a tail to allow them to swim. • Most adult amphibians have 4 legs which can be used for terrestrial or aquatic locomotion. • In frogs and toads, back legs are typically longer to assist in jumping.

  5. Feeding/Digestion • Amphibians are carnivorous and feed on earthworms, insects, arthropods, and small vertebrates. • Aquatic amphibians lunge and suck food into their mouths, while terrestrial amphibians have a sticky projectile tongue that captures prey. • Amphibians have the same type of digestive system as humans except all waste is excreted through the cloaca.

  6. Respiration • Have skin that is permeable to water, oxygen, and carbon dioxide. • Most amphibians have lungs but lack the muscles and diaphragm. Instead air is forced into the lungs from the compressing of the mouth floor. • Some amphibians have no lungs and use their skin to breathe.

  7. Circulation • Amphibians have a three chamber heart. • Amphibians are cold blooded which allows them to change their body temperature depending on the environment.

  8. Nervous System • Amphibians have a nervous system very similar to that of a human. • In contrast they have ten cranial nerves, whereas other animals have twelve. • Amphibians do not have ear and their eardrums are exposed.

  9. Reproduction • Amphibians go through a three stage life cycle (egg, larvae, adult). • Amphibian eggs are placed in the water where the larvae form of the amphibian will grow. • As a larvae, or tadpole, amphibians have gills and a tail to help them move and survive in the water. • At the end of the larvae state, tadpoles go under a metamorphosis where their tail shrinks and four limbs begin to form.

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