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Ch 42 - Amphibians |
Amphibian Evolution:
| Arose from lobe-fined ancestor called Crossopterygians | |
| Land plants & insects provided new food source | |
| Had primitive lungs & short, limb like fins for short periods on land | |
| Appeared during late Devonian | |
| Icthyostega early amphibian with 4 limbs, lungs, & a tail for swimming |
Adaptations:
| Four limbs with claws on digits (toes) | |
| Lungs instead of gills | |
| Both internal & external nares (nostrils) | |
| Three chambered heart (two atria & one ventricle) | |
| Double loop blood circulation to lungs & rest of body cells |

| Skin with keratin (protein) to prevent water loss | |
| Necks to more easily see & feed | |
| Most with smooth, moist skin to take in dissolved oxygen | |
| Some with oral glands to moisten food they eat | |
| Webbed toes without claws | |
| Ectothermic - body temperature changes with environment | |
| Show dormancy or torpor (state of inactivity during unfavorable environmental conditions) | |
| Hibernate in winter and aestivate in summer | |
| Aquatic larva called tadpole goes through metamorphosis to adult | |
| Metamorphosis controlled by hormone called thyroxine |

Tadpole
| External fertilization with amplexus (male clasps back of female as sperm & eggs deposited into water) | |
| Eggs coated with sticky, jelly like material so they attach to objects in water & do not float away | |
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Eggs hatch into tadpoles in about 12 days |
Males with vocal sacs to croak
Classification:
Anura - frogs & toads
Urodela - salamanders & newts
Apoda - caecilians
Trachystoma - sirens or mud eels
Anuran Characteristics:
Both terrestrial & freshwater species
Tadpole with tail, gills, & two-chambered heart
Adults without a tail, four limbs, & lungs
Frog skin smooth & moist for cutaneous respiration, while toads is rough & warty (poison glands)
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Long hind limbs for jumping
Long, forked tongue hinged at front of mouth
Urodela Characteristics:
Includes salamanders & newts
Have elongated bodies with a tail & four limbs
Smooth, moist skin for cutaneous respiration
Less able to stay on dry land than anurans

Spotted Salamander
Size from a few centimeters long to 1.5 meters
Nocturnal when live in drier areas
Newts are aquatic species

Red Spotted Newt
Lay eggs in water or damp soil
Some bear live young
May or may not go through tadpole stage (some hatch & look like small adult)
Apodan Characteristics:
Includes caecilians
Tropical, burrowing, worm like amphibians
Legless
Small eyes & often blind
Eat worms & other invertebrates
Average length 30 centimeters, but can grow up to 1.3 meters
internal fertilization
Female bear live young

Caecilian
Trachystoma Characteristics:
Includes mud eels or sirens
Known as "rough mouth" amphibians
Found in eastern U.S. & southern Europe
Have minute forelimbs & no hindlimbs

Mud Eel or Siren
External Frog Anatomy:
Live double life on land & water
Powerful hind legs for jumping & swimming fold under body when at rest
Bulging eyes to stay submerged but still see predators
Blinking eyelids protect eyes from dust & dehydration
Nictitating membranes clear to moisten eye & see underwater
Internal nostrils or nares allow frog to breathe underwater
Tympanic membranes or eardrums behind each eye transmit sound through bone called columella to inner ear
Eustachian tubes connect mouth & middle ear to equalize pressure

Males croak or make sound to attract females & ward off other males
Have protective coloration from cells called chromatophores
Granular glands secrete foul tasting or poisonous substance
Mucus glands lubricate skin for oxygen to be dissolved & absorbed
Internal Frog Anatomy:
Skeletal System
Nine spinal vertebrae (1 cervical in neck, 7 trunk, & 1 sacral supporting hind legs)
Urostyle long, slim bone connecting sacral vertebrae & trunk
No rib cage, but pectoral girdle forms shoulders & connects front legs
Pelvic girdle connects to hind legs
Digestive System
Tongue sticky, forked, & hinged at front of mouth so can be extended out to catch insects
Can pull eyes inward to help swallow food
Two, sharp, backward-pointing vomerine teeth in roof of mouth help prevent prey from escaping
Maxillary teeth line the edge of the upper jaw
Alimentary canal (mouth, esophagus, stomach, small & large intestines, and cloaca) is where food is digested, absorbed & wastes eliminated
Stomach makes gastric juices to break down food
Pyloric sphincter muscle controls movement of food from stomach into first part of small intestine called duodenum
Liver makes bile to digest fats; stored in gall bladder
Pancreas makes pancreatic juice to digest food in small intestine
Ileum is coiled mid portion of small intestine
Mesentery is a fanlike membrane holding the intestine in place
Wastes collect in large intestine & then move into cloaca along with eggs, sperm, & urine until they leave body through the anus
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Circulatory System
Need more oxygen to burn increased amount of food needed to live on land
3 chambered heart (right atrium receives deoxygenated blood from body, left atrium receives oxygenated blood from lungs, & ventricle pumps blood to lungs & rest of the body)
Double loop blood circulation (pulmonary from heart to lungs & systemic from heart to rest of body)
Conus arteriosus carries blood from ventricle to body cells
Respiratory System
Tadpoles use gills to breathe
Adult frogs breathe through lungs & moist skin (cutaneous respiration)
Glottis is the opening into throat & lungs
Excretory System
Carbon dioxide excreted through skin & lungs
Kidneys filter blood & store urine in urinary bladder until leaves cloaca
Nervous System
Olfactory lobes at base of brain detect smells
Cerebrum behind olfactory lobes controls muscles
Optic lobes detect sight
Cerebellum controls balance & coordination
Medulla oblongata controls heart rate & breathing
Cranial nerves connect brain & spinal cord, while spinal nerves branch off the spinal cord to muscles & sensory receptors