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Frog
Frog
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Frogs
Temporal range: Early JurassicPresent, 200–0 Ma
Various kinds of frog
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Clade: Salientia
Order: Anura
Duméril, 1806 (as Anoures)
Subgroups

See text

Native distribution of frogs (in green)

A frog is any member of a diverse and largely semiaquatic group of short-bodied, tailless amphibian vertebrates composing the order Anura[1] (coming from the Ancient Greek ἀνούρα, literally 'without tail'). Frog species with rough skin texture due to wart-like parotoid glands tend to be called toads, but the distinction between frogs and toads is informal and purely cosmetic, not from taxonomy or evolutionary history.

Frogs are widely distributed, ranging from the tropics to subarctic regions, but the greatest concentration of species diversity is in tropical rainforest and associated wetlands. They account for around 88% of extant amphibian species, and are one of the five most diverse vertebrate orders. The oldest fossil "proto-frog" Triadobatrachus is known from the Early Triassic of Madagascar (250 million years ago), but molecular clock dating suggests their divergence from other amphibians may extend further back to the Permian, 265 million years ago.

Adult frogs have a stout body, protruding eyes, anteriorly-attached tongue, limbs folded underneath, and no tail (the "tail" of tailed frogs is an extension of the male cloaca). Frogs have glandular skin, with secretions ranging from distasteful to toxic. Their skin varies in colour from well-camouflaged dappled brown, grey and green, to vivid patterns of bright red or yellow and black to show toxicity and ward off predators. Adult frogs live in both fresh water and on dry land; some species are adapted for living underground or in trees. As their skin is semi-permeable, making them susceptible to dehydration, they either live in moist niches or have special adaptations to deal with drier habitats. Frogs produce a wide range of vocalisations, particularly in their breeding season, and exhibit many different kinds of complex behaviors to attract mates, to fend off predators and to generally survive.

Being oviparous anamniotes, frogs typically spawn their eggs in bodies of water. The eggs then hatch into fully aquatic larvae called tadpoles, which have tails and internal gills. A few species lay eggs on land or bypass the tadpole stage altogether. Tadpoles have highly specialised rasping mouth parts suitable for herbivorous, omnivorous or planktivorous diets. The life cycle is completed when they metamorphose into semiaquatic adults capable of terrestrial locomotion and hybrid respiration using both lungs aided by buccal pumping and gas exchange across the skin, and the larval tail regresses into an internal urostyle. Adult frogs generally have a carnivorous diet consisting of small invertebrates, especially insects, but omnivorous species exist and a few feed on plant matter. Frogs generally seize and ingest food by protruding their adhesive tongue and then swallow the item whole, often using their eyeballs and extraocular muscles to help pushing down the throat, and their digestive system is extremely efficient at converting what they eat into body mass. Being low-level consumers, both tadpoles and adult frogs are an important food source for other predators and a vital part of the food web dynamics of many of the world's ecosystems.

Frogs (especially their muscular hindlimbs) are eaten by humans as food in many cuisines, and also have many cultural roles in literature, symbolism and religion. They are environmental bellwethers, with declines in frog populations considered early warning signs of environmental degradation. Global frog populations and diversities have declined significantly since the 1950s. More than one third of species are considered to be threatened with extinction, and over 120 are believed to have become extinct since the 1980s. Frog malformations are on the rise as an emerging fungal disease, chytridiomycosis, has spread around the world. Conservation biologists are working to solve these problems.

Etymology and taxonomy

[edit]

The use of the common names frog and toad has no taxonomic justification. From a classification perspective, all members of the order Anura are frogs, but only members of the family Bufonidae are considered "true toads". The use of the term frog in common names usually refers to species that are aquatic or semi-aquatic and have smooth, moist skins; the term toad generally refers to species that are terrestrial with dry, warty skins.[2][3] There are numerous exceptions to this rule. The European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina) has a slightly warty skin and prefers a watery habitat[4] whereas the Panamanian golden frog (Atelopus zeteki) is in the toad family Bufonidae and has a smooth skin.[5]

Etymology

[edit]

The origin of the order name Anura—and its original spelling Anoures—is the Ancient Greek alpha privative prefix ἀν- (an- from ἀ- before a vowel) 'without',[6] and οὐρά (ourá) 'animal tail'.[7] meaning "tailless". It refers to the tailless character of these amphibians.[8][9][10]

The origins of the word frog are uncertain and debated.[11] The word is first attested in Old English as frogga, but the usual Old English word for the frog was frosc (with variants such as frox and forsc), and it is agreed that the word frog is somehow related to this. Old English frosc remained in dialectal use in English as frosh and frosk into the nineteenth century,[12] and is paralleled widely in other Germanic languages, with examples in the modern languages including German Frosch, Norwegian frosk, Icelandic froskur, and Dutch (kik)vors.[11] These words allow reconstruction of a Common Germanic ancestor *froskaz.[13] The third edition of the Oxford English Dictionary finds that the etymology of *froskaz is uncertain, but agrees with arguments that it could plausibly derive from a Proto-Indo-European base along the lines of *preu, meaning 'jump'.[11]

How Old English frosc gave rise to frogga is, however, uncertain, as the development does not involve a regular sound-change. Instead, it seems that there was a trend in Old English to coin nicknames for animals ending in -g, with examples—themselves all of uncertain etymology—including dog, hog, pig, stag, and (ear)wig. Frog appears to have been adapted from frosc as part of this trend.[11]

Meanwhile, the word toad, first attested as Old English tādige, is unique to English and is likewise of uncertain etymology.[14] It is the basis for the word tadpole, first attested as Middle English taddepol, apparently meaning 'toad-head'.[15]

Taxonomy

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About 87% of amphibian species are classified in the order Anura.[16] These include over 7,700 species[1] in 59 families, of which the Hylidae (1062 spp.), Strabomantidae (807 spp.), Microhylidae (758 spp.), and Bufonidae (657 spp.) are the richest in species.[17]

Dark-coloured toad facing left
European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina)

The Anura include all modern frogs and any fossil species that fit within the anuran definition. The characteristics of anuran adults include: 9 or fewer presacral vertebrae, the presence of a urostyle formed of fused vertebrae, no tail, a long and forward-sloping ilium, shorter fore limbs than hind limbs, radius and ulna fused, tibia and fibula fused, elongated ankle bones, absence of a prefrontal bone, presence of a hyoid plate, a lower jaw without teeth (with the exception of Gastrotheca guentheri) consisting of three pairs of bones (angulosplenial, dentary, and mentomeckelian, with the last pair being absent in Pipoidea),[18] an unsupported tongue, lymph spaces underneath the skin, and a muscle, the protractor lentis, attached to the lens of the eye.[19] The anuran larva or tadpole has a single central respiratory spiracle and mouthparts consisting of keratinous beaks and denticles.[19]

Panamanian golden frog
Panamanian golden frog (Atelopus zeteki)

Frogs and toads are broadly classified into three suborders: Archaeobatrachia, which includes four families of primitive frogs; Mesobatrachia, which includes five families of more evolutionary intermediate frogs; and Neobatrachia, by far the largest group, which contains the remaining families of modern frogs, including most common species throughout the world. The suborder Neobatrachia is further divided into the two superfamilies Hyloidea and Ranoidea.[20] This classification is based on such morphological features as the number of vertebrae, the structure of the pectoral girdle, and the morphology of tadpoles. While this classification is largely accepted, relationships among families of frogs are still debated.[21]

Some species of anurans hybridise readily. For instance, the edible frog (Pelophylax esculentus) is a hybrid between the pool frog (P. lessonae) and the marsh frog (P. ridibundus).[22] The fire-bellied toads Bombina bombina and B. variegata are similar in forming hybrids. These are less fertile than their parents, giving rise to a hybrid zone where the hybrids are prevalent.[23]

Evolution

[edit]

The origins and evolutionary relationships between the three main groups of amphibians are hotly debated. A molecular phylogeny based on rDNA analysis dating from 2005 suggests that salamanders and caecilians are more closely related to each other than they are to frogs and the divergence of the three groups took place in the Paleozoic or early Mesozoic before the break-up of the supercontinent Pangaea and soon after their divergence from the lobe-finned fishes. This would help account for the relative scarcity of amphibian fossils from the period before the groups split.[24] Another molecular phylogenetic analysis conducted about the same time concluded that lissamphibians first appeared about 330 million years ago and that the temnospondyl-origin hypothesis is more credible than other theories. The neobatrachians seemed to have originated in Africa/India, the salamanders in East Asia and the caecilians in tropical Pangaea.[25] Other researchers, while agreeing with the main thrust of this study, questioned the choice of calibration points used to synchronise the data. They proposed that the date of lissamphibian diversification should be placed in the Permian, rather less than 300 million years ago, a date in better agreement with the palaeontological data.[26] A further study in 2011 using both extinct and living taxa sampled for morphological, as well as molecular data, came to the conclusion that Lissamphibia is monophyletic and that it should be nested within Lepospondyli rather than within Temnospondyli. The study postulated that Lissamphibia originated no earlier than the late Carboniferous, some 290 to 305 million years ago. The split between Anura and Caudata was estimated as taking place 292 million years ago, rather later than most molecular studies suggest, with the caecilians splitting off 239 million years ago.[27]

A fossilised frog from the Czech Republic, possibly Palaeobatrachus gigas

In 2008, Gerobatrachus hottoni, a temnospondyl with many frog- and salamander-like characteristics, was discovered in Texas. It dated back 290 million years and was hailed as a missing link, a stem batrachian close to the common ancestor of frogs and salamanders, consistent with the widely accepted hypothesis that frogs and salamanders are more closely related to each other (forming a clade called Batrachia) than they are to caecilians.[28][29] However, others have suggested that Gerobatrachus hottoni was only a dissorophoid temnospondyl unrelated to extant amphibians.[30]

Salientia (Latin salire (salio), "to jump") is the name of the total group that includes modern frogs in the order Anura as well as their close fossil relatives, the "proto-frogs" or "stem-frogs". The common features possessed by these proto-frogs include 14 presacral vertebrae (modern frogs have eight or 9), a long and forward-sloping ilium in the pelvis, the presence of a frontoparietal bone, and a lower jaw without teeth. The earliest known amphibians that were more closely related to frogs than to salamanders are Triadobatrachus massinoti, from the early Triassic period of Madagascar (about 250 million years ago), and Czatkobatrachus polonicus, from the Early Triassic of Poland (about the same age as Triadobatrachus).[31] The skull of Triadobatrachus is frog-like, being broad with large eye sockets, but the fossil has features diverging from modern frogs. These include a longer body with more vertebrae. The tail has separate vertebrae unlike the fused urostyle or coccyx in modern frogs. The tibia and fibula bones are also separate, making it probable that Triadobatrachus was not an efficient leaper.[31] A 2019 study has noted the presence of Salientia from the Chinle Formation, and suggested that anurans might have first appeared during the Late Triassic.[32]

On the basis of fossil evidence, the earliest known "true frogs" that fall into the anuran lineage proper all lived in the early Jurassic period.[2][33] One such early frog species, Prosalirus bitis, was discovered in 1995 in the Kayenta Formation of Arizona and dates back to the Early Jurassic epoch (199.6 to 175 million years ago), making Prosalirus somewhat more recent than Triadobatrachus.[34] Like the latter, Prosalirus did not have greatly enlarged legs, but had the typical three-pronged pelvic structure of modern frogs. Unlike Triadobatrachus, Prosalirus had already lost nearly all of its tail[35] and was well adapted for jumping.[36] Another Early Jurassic frog is Vieraella herbsti, which is known only from dorsal and ventral impressions of a single animal and was estimated to be 33 mm (1+14 in) from snout to vent. Notobatrachus degiustoi from the middle Jurassic is slightly younger, about 155–170 million years old. The main evolutionary changes in this species involved the shortening of the body and the loss of the tail. Tadpoles of N. degiustoi constitute the oldest tadpoles found as of 2024, dating back to 168–161 million years ago. These tadpoles also showed adaptations for filter-feeding, implying residence in temporary pools by filter-feeding larvae was already commonplace.[37] The evolution of modern Anura likely was complete by the Jurassic period. Since then, evolutionary changes in chromosome numbers have taken place about 20 times faster in mammals than in frogs, which means speciation is occurring more rapidly in mammals.[38]

According to genetic studies, the families Hyloidea, Microhylidae, and the clade Natatanura (comprising about 88% of living frogs) diversified simultaneously some 66 million years ago, soon after the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event associated with the Chicxulub impactor. All origins of arboreality (e.g. in Hyloidea and Natatanura) follow from that time and the resurgence of forest that occurred afterwards.[39][40]

Frog fossils have been found on all of the Earth's continents.[41][42] In 2020, it was announced that 40 million year old helmeted frog fossils had been discovered by a team of vertebrate palaeontologists in Seymour Island on the Antarctic Peninsula, indicating that this region was once home to frogs related to those now living in South American Nothofagus forest.[43]

Phylogeny

[edit]

A cladogram showing the relationships of the different families of frogs in the clade Anura can be seen in the table below. This diagram, in the form of a tree, shows how each frog family is related to other families, with each node representing a point of common ancestry. It is based on Frost et al. (2006),[44] Heinicke et al. (2009)[45] and Pyron and Wiens (2011).[46]

Anura
Bombianura
Costata
Pipanura
Xenoanura
Acosmanura
Anomocoela
Neobatrachia

Heleophrynidae

Phthanobatrachia
Notogaeanura
Ranoides

Morphology and physiology

[edit]
A bullfrog skeleton, showing elongated limb bones and extra joints. Red marks indicate bones which have been substantially elongated in frogs and joints which have become mobile. Blue indicates joints and bones which have not been modified or only somewhat elongated.

Frogs have no tail, except as larvae. Most frogs have long hind legs, elongated ankle bones, webbed toes, no claws, large eyes, and either smooth or warty skin. They have short vertebral columns, with no more than 10 free vertebrae and fused tailbones (urostyle or coccyx).[47] Frogs range in size from a snout–vent length of 7.7 mm (0.30 in) (the Paedophryne amauensis of Papua New Guinea)[48] to about 35 cm (14 in) (the goliath frog (Conraua goliath) of central Africa, which is about 3.3 kg (7.3 lb)).[49] Some extinct prehistoric species were even larger.[50]

Feet and legs

[edit]

A frog's foot and leg structure is related to its habitat. Across species, these structures vary based on whether the species lives primarily on the ground, in water, in trees, or in burrows. Adult anurans have four fingers on the hands and five toes on the feet,[51] but the smallest species often have hands and feet where some of the digits are vestigial.[52] Frogs must be able to move quickly through their environment to catch prey and escape predators, and numerous adaptations help them to do so. Most frogs are either proficient jumpers or descend from ancestors that were, with much of the musculoskeletal morphology modified for this purpose. The tibia, fibula, and tarsals have been fused into a single strong bone, as have the radius and ulna in the fore limbs (which must absorb the impact on landing). The metatarsals have become elongated to add to the leg length, allowing frogs to push against the ground for a longer period on take-off. The ilium has elongated and formed a mobile joint with the sacrum which, in specialist jumpers such as ranids and hylids, functions as an additional limb joint to further power the leaps. The tail vertebrae have fused into a urostyle which is retracted inside the pelvis. This enables frogs to transfer force from the legs to the body during a leap.[47]

Webbed foot
Webbed hind foot of common frog
(Rana temporaria)
Tyler's tree frog (Litoria tyleri) has large toe pads and webbed feet.

The muscular system has been similarly modified. The hind limbs of ancestral frogs presumably contained pairs of muscles which would act in opposition (one muscle to flex the knee, a different muscle to extend it), as is seen in most other limbed animals. However, in modern frogs, almost all muscles have been modified to contribute to the action of jumping, with only a few small muscles remaining to bring the limb back to the starting position and maintain posture. The muscles have also been greatly enlarged, with the main leg muscles accounting for over 17% of the total mass of frogs.[53]

Many frogs have webbed feet and the degree of webbing is directly proportional to the amount of time the species spends in the water.[54] The completely aquatic African dwarf frog (Hymenochirus sp.) has fully webbed toes, whereas those of White's tree frog (Litoria caerulea), an arboreal species, are only a quarter or half webbed.[55] Exceptions include flying frogs in the Hylidae and Rhacophoridae, which also have fully webbed toes used in gliding.

Arboreal frogs have pads located on the ends of their toes to help grip vertical surfaces. These are not suction pads, the surface consisting instead of columnar cells with flat tops with small gaps between them lubricated by mucous glands. When the frog applies pressure, the cells adhere to irregularities on the surface and the grip is maintained through adhesion. This allows the frog to climb on smooth surfaces, but the system does not function efficiently when the pads are excessively wet.[56]

In many arboreal frogs, a small "intercalary structure" on each toe increases the surface area touching the substrate. Furthermore, many arboreal frogs have hip joints that allow both hopping and walking. Some frogs that live high in trees even possess an elaborate degree of webbing between their toes. This allows the frogs to "parachute" or make a controlled glide from one position in the canopy to another.[57]

Ground-dwelling frogs generally lack the adaptations of aquatic and arboreal frogs. Most have smaller toe pads, if any, and little webbing. Some burrowing frogs such as Couch's spadefoot (Scaphiopus couchii) have a flap-like toe extension on the hind feet, a keratinised tubercle often referred to as a spade, that helps them to burrow.[58]

Sometimes during the tadpole stage, one of the developing rear legs is eaten by a predator such as a dragonfly nymph. In some cases, the full leg still grows, but in others it does not, although the frog may still live out its normal lifespan with only three limbs. Occasionally, a parasitic flatworm (Ribeiroia ondatrae) digs into the rear of a tadpole, causing a rearrangement of the limb bud cells and the frog develops one or more extra legs.[59]

Northern leopard frog (Rana pipiens) moulting and eating its skin

Skin

[edit]

A frog's skin is protective, has a respiratory function, can absorb water, and helps control body temperature. It has many glands, particularly on the head and back, which often exude distasteful and toxic substances (granular glands). The secretion is often sticky and helps keep the skin moist, protects against the entry of moulds and bacteria, and makes the animal slippery and more able to escape from predators.[60] The skin is shed every few weeks. It usually splits down the middle of the back and across the belly, and the frog pulls its arms and legs free. The sloughed skin is then worked towards the head where it is quickly eaten.[61]

Being cold-blooded, frogs have to adopt suitable behaviour patterns to regulate their temperature. To warm up, they can move into the sun or onto a warm surface; if they overheat, they can move into the shade or adopt a stance that exposes the minimum area of skin to the air. This posture is also used to prevent water loss and involves the frog squatting close to the substrate with its hands and feet tucked under its chin and body.[62] The colour of a frog's skin is used for thermoregulation. In cool damp conditions, the colour will be darker than on a hot dry day. The grey foam-nest tree frog (Chiromantis xerampelina) is even able to turn white to minimise the chance of overheating.[63]

Many frogs are able to absorb water and oxygen directly through the skin, especially around the pelvic area, but the permeability of a frog's skin can also result in water loss. Glands located all over the body exude mucus which helps keep the skin moist and reduces evaporation. Some glands on the hands and chest of males are specialised to produce sticky secretions to aid in amplexus. Similar glands in tree frogs produce a glue-like substance on the adhesive discs of the feet. Some arboreal frogs reduce water loss by having a waterproof layer of skin, and several South American species coat their skin with a waxy secretion. Other frogs have adopted behaviours to conserve water, including becoming nocturnal and resting in a water-conserving position. Some frogs may also rest in large groups with each frog pressed against its neighbours. This reduces the amount of skin exposed to the air or a dry surface, and thus reduces water loss.[62] Woodhouse's toad (Bufo woodhousii), if given access to water after confinement in a dry location, sits in the shallows to rehydrate.[64] The male hairy frog (Trichobatrachus robustus) has dermal papillae projecting from its lower back and thighs, giving it a bristly appearance. These contain blood vessels and are thought to increase the area of the skin available for respiration.[65]

Frog barely recognisable against brown decaying leaf litter.
Pouched frog (Assa darlingtoni) camouflaged against leaf litter
Wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus) uses disruptive coloration.

Some species have bony plates embedded in the skin, a trait that appears to have evolved independently several times.[66] In certain other species, the skin at the top of the head is compacted and the connective tissue of the dermis is co-ossified with the bones of the skull (exostosis).[67][68]

Camouflage is a common defensive mechanism in frogs. Features such as warts and skin folds are usually on ground-dwelling frogs, for whom smooth skin would not provide such effective camouflage. Certain frogs change colour between night and day, as light and moisture stimulate the pigment cells and cause them to expand or contract.[69] Some are even able to control their skin texture.[70] The Pacific tree frog (Pseudacris regilla) has green and brown morphs, plain or spotted, and changes colour depending on the time of year and general background colour.[71] The Wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus) uses disruptive coloration including black eye markings similar to voids between leaves, bands of the dorsal skin (dorsolateral dermal plica) similar to a leaf midrib as well as stains, spots and leg stripes similar to fallen leaf features.

Respiration and circulation

[edit]

Like other amphibians, oxygen can pass through their highly permeable skins. This unique feature allows them to remain in places without access to the air, respiring through their skins. Ribs are generally absent, so the lungs are filled by buccal pumping and a frog deprived of its lungs can maintain its body functions without them.[69] The fully aquatic Bornean flat-headed frog (Barbourula kalimantanensis) is the first frog known to lack lungs entirely.[72]

Frogs have three-chambered hearts, a feature they share with lizards. Oxygenated blood from the lungs and de-oxygenated blood from the respiring tissues enter the heart through separate atria. When these chambers contract, the two blood streams pass into a common ventricle before being pumped via a spiral valve to the appropriate vessel, the aorta for oxygenated blood and pulmonary artery for deoxygenated blood.[73]

Some species of frog have adaptations that allow them to survive in oxygen deficient water. The Titicaca water frog (Telmatobius culeus) is one such species and has wrinkly skin that increases its surface area to enhance gas exchange. It normally makes no use of its rudimentary lungs but will sometimes raise and lower its body rhythmically while on the lake bed to increase the flow of water around it.[74]

Dissected frog
Anatomical model of a dissected frog: 1 Right atrium, 2 Lungs, 3 Aorta, 4 Egg mass, 5 Colon, 6 Left atrium, 7 Ventricle, 8 Stomach, 9 Liver, 10 Gallbladder, 11 Small intestine, 12 Cloaca

Digestion and excretion

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Frogs have maxillary teeth along their upper jaw which are used to hold food before it is swallowed. These teeth are very weak, and cannot be used to chew or catch and harm agile prey. Instead, the frog uses its sticky, cleft tongue to catch insects and other small moving prey. The tongue normally lies coiled in the mouth, free at the back and attached to the mandible at the front. It can be shot out and retracted at great speed.[54] In amphibians there are salivary glands on the tongue, which in frogs produce what is called a two-phase viscoelastic fluid. When exposed to pressure, like when the tongue is wrapping around a prey, it becomes runny and covers the prey's body. As the pressure drops, it returns to a thick and elastic state, which gives the tongue an extra grip.[75] Some frogs have no tongue and just stuff food into their mouths with their hands.[54] The African bullfrog (Pyxicephalus), which preys on relatively large animals such as mice and other frogs, has cone shaped bony projections called odontoid processes at the front of the lower jaw which function like teeth.[16] The eyes assist in the swallowing of food as they can be retracted through holes in the skull and help push food down the throat.[54][76]

The food then moves through the oesophagus into the stomach where digestive enzymes are added and it is churned up. It then proceeds to the small intestine (duodenum and ileum) where most digestion occurs. Pancreatic juice from the pancreas, and bile, produced by the liver and stored in the gallbladder, are secreted into the small intestine, where the fluids digest the food and the nutrients are absorbed. The food residue passes into the large intestine where excess water is removed and the wastes are passed out through the cloaca.[77]

Although adapted to terrestrial life, frogs resemble freshwater fish in their inability to conserve body water effectively. When they are on land, much water is lost by evaporation from the skin. The excretory system is similar to that of mammals and there are two kidneys that remove nitrogenous products from the blood. Frogs produce large quantities of dilute urine in order to flush out toxic products from the kidney tubules.[78] The nitrogen is excreted as ammonia by tadpoles and aquatic frogs but mainly as urea, a less toxic product, by most terrestrial adults. A few species of tree frog with little access to water excrete the even less toxic uric acid.[78] The urine passes along paired ureters to the urinary bladder from which it is vented periodically into the cloaca. All bodily wastes exit the body through the cloaca which terminates in a cloacal vent.[79]

Reproductive system

[edit]

In the male frog, the two testes are attached to the kidneys and semen passes into the kidneys through fine tubes called efferent ducts. It then travels on through the ureters, which are consequently known as urinogenital ducts. There is no penis, and sperm is ejected from the cloaca directly onto the eggs as the female lays them. The ovaries of the female frog are beside the kidneys and the eggs pass down a pair of oviducts and through the cloaca to the exterior.[79]

When frogs mate, the male climbs on the back of the female and wraps his fore limbs round her body, either behind the front legs or just in front of the hind legs. This position is called amplexus and may be held for several days.[80] The male frog has certain hormone-dependent secondary sexual characteristics. These include the development of special pads on his thumbs in the breeding season, to give him a firm hold.[81] The grip of the male frog during amplexus stimulates the female to release eggs, usually wrapped in jelly, as spawn. In many species the male is smaller and slimmer than the female. Males have vocal cords and make a range of croaks, particularly in the breeding season, and in some species they also have vocal sacs to amplify the sound.[79]

Nervous system

[edit]

Frogs have a highly developed nervous system that consists of a brain, spinal cord and nerves. Many parts of frog brains correspond with those of humans. It consists of two olfactory lobes, two cerebral hemispheres, a pineal body, two optic lobes, a cerebellum and a medulla oblongata. Muscular coordination and posture are controlled by the cerebellum, and the medulla oblongata regulates respiration, digestion and other automatic functions. The relative size of the cerebrum in frogs is much smaller than it is in humans. Frogs have ten pairs of cranial nerves which pass information from the outside directly to the brain, and ten pairs of spinal nerves which pass information from the extremities to the brain through the spinal cord.[79] By contrast, all amniotes (mammals, birds and reptiles) have twelve pairs of cranial nerves.[82]

Close-up of frog's head showing eye, nostril, mouth, and tympanum

Sight

[edit]

The eyes of most frogs are located on either side of the head near the top and project outwards as hemispherical bulges. They provide binocular vision over a field of 100° to the front and a total visual field of almost 360°.[83] They may be the only part of an otherwise submerged frog to protrude from the water. Each eye has closable upper and lower lids and a nictitating membrane which provides further protection, especially when the frog is swimming.[84] Members of the aquatic family Pipidae have the eyes located at the top of the head, a position better suited for detecting prey in the water above.[83] The irises come in a range of colours and the pupils in a range of shapes. The common toad (Bufo bufo) has golden irises and horizontal slit-like pupils, the red-eyed tree frog (Agalychnis callidryas) has vertical slit pupils, the poison dart frog has dark irises, the fire-bellied toad (Bombina spp.) has triangular pupils and the tomato frog (Dyscophus spp.) has circular ones. The irises of the southern toad (Anaxyrus terrestris) are patterned so as to blend in with the surrounding camouflaged skin.[84]

The distant vision of a frog is better than its near vision. Calling frogs will quickly become silent when they see an intruder or even a moving shadow but the closer an object is, the less well it is seen.[84] When a frog shoots out its tongue to catch an insect it is reacting to a small moving object that it cannot see well and must line it up precisely beforehand because it shuts its eyes as the tongue is extended.[54] Although it was formerly debated,[85] more recent research has shown that frogs can see in colour, even in very low light.[86]

Hearing

[edit]
Surface rendering of the head of the frog Atelopus franciscus, with ear parts highlighted

Frogs can hear both in the air and below water. They do not have external ears; the eardrums (tympanic membranes) are directly exposed or may be covered by a layer of skin and are visible as a circular area just behind the eye. The size and distance apart of the eardrums is related to the frequency and wavelength at which the frog calls. In some species such as the bullfrog, the size of the tympanum indicates the sex of the frog; males have tympani that are larger than their eyes while in females, the eyes and tympani are much the same size.[87] A noise causes the tympanum to vibrate and the sound is transmitted to the middle and inner ear. The middle ear contains semicircular canals which help control balance and orientation. In the inner ear, the auditory hair cells are arranged in two areas of the cochlea, the basilar papilla and the amphibian papilla. The former detects high frequencies and the latter low frequencies.[88] Because the cochlea is short, frogs use electrical tuning to extend their range of audible frequencies and help discriminate different sounds.[89] This arrangement enables detection of the territorial and breeding calls of their conspecifics. In some species that inhabit arid regions, the sound of thunder or heavy rain may arouse them from a dormant state.[88] A frog may be startled by an unexpected noise but it will not usually take any action until it has located the source of the sound by sight.[87]

Call

[edit]
A male Dendropsophus microcephalus displaying its vocal sac during its call
Advertisement call of male Atelopus franciscus
frogs croak

The call or croak of a frog is unique to its species. Frogs create this sound by passing air through the larynx in the throat. In most calling frogs, the sound is amplified by one or more vocal sacs, membranes of skin under the throat or on the corner of the mouth, that distend during the amplification of the call. Some frog calls are so loud that they can be heard up to a mile (1.6 km) away.[90] Additionally, some species have been found to use man-made structures such as drain pipes for artificial amplification of their call.[91] The coastal tailed frog (Ascaphus truei) lives in mountain streams in North America and does not vocalise.[92]

The main function of calling is for male frogs to attract mates. Males may call individually or there may be a chorus of sound where numerous males have converged on breeding sites. In many frog species, such as the common tree frog (Polypedates leucomystax), females reply to males' calls, which acts to reinforce reproductive activity in a breeding colony.[93] Female frogs prefer males that produce sounds of greater intensity and lower frequency, attributes that stand out in a crowd. The rationale for this is thought to be that by demonstrating his prowess, the male shows his fitness to produce superior offspring.[94]

A different call is emitted by a male frog or unreceptive female when mounted by another male. This is a distinct chirruping sound and is accompanied by a vibration of the body.[95] Tree frogs and some non-aquatic species have a rain call that they make on the basis of humidity cues prior to a shower.[95] Many species also have a territorial call that is used to drive away other males. All of these calls are emitted with the mouth of the frog closed.[95] A distress call, emitted by some frogs when they are in danger, is produced with the mouth open resulting in a higher-pitched call. It is typically used when the frog has been grabbed by a predator and may serve to distract or disorient the attacker so that it releases the frog.[95]

Distinctive low "jug-o-rum" sound of banded bullfrog

Many species of frog have deep calls. The croak of the American bullfrog (Rana catesbiana) is sometimes written as "jug o' rum".[96] The Pacific tree frog (Pseudacris regilla) produces the onomatopoeic "ribbit" often heard in films.[97] Other renderings of frog calls into speech include "brekekekex koax koax", the call of the marsh frog (Pelophylax ridibundus) in The Frogs, an Ancient Greek comic drama by Aristophanes.[98] The calls of the Concave-eared torrent frog (Amolops tormotus) are unusual in many aspects. The males are notable for their varieties of calls where upward and downward frequency modulations take place. When they communicate, they produce calls that fall in the ultrasound frequency range. The last aspect that makes this species of frog's calls unusual is that nonlinear acoustic phenomena are important components in their acoustic signals.[99]

Torpor

[edit]

During extreme conditions, some frogs enter a state of torpor and remain inactive for months. In colder regions, many species of frog hibernate in winter. Those that live on land such as the American toad (Bufo americanus) dig a burrow and make a hibernaculum in which to lie dormant. Others, less proficient at digging, find a crevice or bury themselves in dead leaves. Aquatic species such as the American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) normally sink to the bottom of the pond where they lie, semi-immersed in mud but still able to access the oxygen dissolved in the water. Their metabolism slows down and they live on their energy reserves. Some frogs such as the wood frog, moor frog, or spring peeper can even survive being frozen. Ice crystals form under the skin and in the body cavity but the essential organs are protected from freezing by a high concentration of glucose. An apparently lifeless, frozen frog can resume respiration and its heartbeat can restart when conditions warm up.[100]

At the other extreme, the striped burrowing frog (Cyclorana alboguttata) regularly aestivates during the hot, dry season in Australia, surviving in a dormant state without access to food and water for nine or ten months of the year. It burrows underground and curls up inside a protective cocoon formed by its shed skin. Researchers at the University of Queensland have found that during aestivation, the metabolism of the frog is altered and the operational efficiency of the mitochondria is increased. This means that the limited amount of energy available to the comatose frog is used in a more efficient manner. This survival mechanism is only useful to animals that remain completely unconscious for an extended period of time and whose energy requirements are low because they are cold-blooded and have no need to generate heat.[101] Other research showed that, to provide these energy requirements, muscles atrophy, but hind limb muscles are preferentially unaffected.[102] Frogs have been found to have upper critical temperatures of around 41 degrees Celsius.[103]

Locomotion

[edit]

Different species of frog use a number of methods of moving around including jumping, running, walking, swimming, burrowing, climbing and gliding.

Rainforest rocket frog jumping

Jumping

[edit]

Frogs are generally recognised as exceptional jumpers and, relative to their size, the best jumpers of all vertebrates.[104] The striped rocket frog, Litoria nasuta, can leap over two metres (6+12 feet), a distance that is more than fifty times its body length of 55 mm (2+14 in).[105] There are tremendous differences between species in jumping capability. Within a species, jump distance increases with increasing size, but relative jumping distance (body-lengths jumped) decreases. The Indian skipper frog (Euphlyctis cyanophlyctis) has the ability to leap out of the water from a position floating on the surface.[106] The tiny northern cricket frog (Acris crepitans) can "skitter" across the surface of a pond with a series of short rapid jumps.[107]

Slow-motion photography shows that the muscles have passive flexibility. They are first stretched while the frog is still in the crouched position, then they are contracted before being stretched again to launch the frog into the air. The fore legs are folded against the chest and the hind legs remain in the extended, streamlined position for the duration of the jump.[53] In some extremely capable jumpers, such as the Cuban tree frog (Osteopilus septentrionalis) and the northern leopard frog (Lithobates pipiens), the peak power exerted during a jump can exceed that which the muscle is theoretically capable of producing. When the muscles contract, the energy is first transferred into the stretched tendon which is wrapped around the ankle bone. Then the muscles stretch again at the same time as the tendon releases its energy like a catapult to produce a powerful acceleration beyond the limits of muscle-powered acceleration.[108] A similar mechanism has been documented in locusts and grasshoppers.[109]

Early hatching of froglets can have negative effects on frog jumping performance and overall locomotion.[110] The hindlimbs are unable to completely form, which results in them being shorter and much weaker relative to a normal hatching froglet.[110] Early hatching froglets may tend to depend on other forms of locomotion more often, such as swimming and walking.[110]

Walking and running

[edit]
Phrynomantis bifasciatus walking on a level surface

Frogs in the families Bufonidae, Rhinophrynidae, and Microhylidae have short back legs and tend to walk rather than jump.[111] When they try to move rapidly, they speed up the rate of movement of their limbs or resort to an ungainly hopping gait. The Great Plains narrow-mouthed toad (Gastrophryne olivacea) has been described as having a gait that is "a combination of running and short hops that are usually only an inch or two in length".[112] In an experiment, Fowler's toad (Anaxyrus fowleri) was placed on a treadmill which was turned at varying speeds. By measuring the toad's uptake of oxygen it was found that hopping was an inefficient use of resources during sustained locomotion but was a useful strategy during short bursts of high-intensity activity.[113]

The red-legged running frog (Kassina maculata) has short, slim hind limbs unsuited to jumping. It can move fast by using a running gait in which the two hind legs are used alternately. Slow-motion photography shows, unlike a horse that can trot or gallop, the frog's gait remained similar at slow, medium, and fast speeds.[114] This species can also climb trees and shrubs, and does so at night to catch insects.[115] The Indian skipper frog (Euphlyctis cyanophlyctis) has broad feet and can run across the surface of the water for several metres (yards).[107]

Swimming

[edit]
Common toad swimming
Common toad (Bufo bufo) swimming

Frogs that live in or visit water have adaptations that improve their swimming abilities. The hind limbs are heavily muscled and strong. The webbing between the toes of the hind feet increases the area of the foot and helps propel the frog powerfully through the water. Members of the family Pipidae are wholly aquatic and show the most marked specialisation. They have inflexible vertebral columns, flattened, streamlined bodies, lateral line systems, and powerful hind limbs with large webbed feet.[116] Tadpoles mostly have large tail fins which provide thrust when the tail is moved from side to side.[117]

Burrowing

[edit]

Some frogs have become adapted for burrowing and a life underground. They tend to have rounded bodies, short limbs, small heads with bulging eyes, and hind feet adapted for excavation. An extreme example of this is the purple frog (Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis) from southern India which feeds on termites and spends almost its whole life underground. It emerges briefly during the monsoon to mate and breed in temporary pools. It has a tiny head with a pointed snout and a plump, rounded body. Because of this fossorial existence, it was first described in 2003, being new to the scientific community at that time, although previously known to local people.[118]

Purple frog
Purple frog (Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis)

The spadefoot toads of North America are also adapted to underground life. The Plains spadefoot toad (Spea bombifrons) is typical and has a flap of keratinised bone attached to one of the metatarsals of the hind feet which it uses to dig itself backwards into the ground. As it digs, the toad wriggles its hips from side to side to sink into the loose soil. It has a shallow burrow in the summer from which it emerges at night to forage. In winter, it digs much deeper and has been recorded at a depth of 4.5 m (14 ft 9 in).[119] The tunnel is filled with soil and the toad hibernates in a small chamber at the end. During this time, urea accumulates in its tissues and water is drawn in from the surrounding damp soil by osmosis to supply the toad's needs.[119] Spadefoot toads are explosive breeders, all emerging from their burrows at the same time and converging on temporary pools, attracted to one of these by the calling of the first male to find a suitable breeding location.[120]

The burrowing frogs of Australia have a different lifestyle. The western spotted frog (Heleioporus albopunctatus) digs a burrow beside a river or in the bed of an ephemeral stream and regularly emerges to forage. Mating takes place and eggs are laid in a foam nest inside the burrow. The eggs partially develop there but do not hatch until they are submerged following heavy rainfall. The tadpoles then swim out into the open water and rapidly complete their development.[121] Madagascan burrowing frogs are less fossorial and mostly bury themselves in leaf litter. One of these, the green burrowing frog (Scaphiophryne marmorata), has a flattened head with a short snout and well-developed metatarsal tubercles on its hind feet to help with excavation. It also has greatly enlarged terminal discs on its fore feet that help it to clamber around in bushes.[122] It breeds in temporary pools that form after rains.[123]

Climbing

[edit]
Frog climbing
Burmeister's leaf frog
Group of glass frogs

Tree frogs live high in the canopy, where they scramble around on the branches, twigs, and leaves, sometimes never coming down to earth. The "true" tree frogs belong to the family Hylidae, but members of other frog families have independently adopted an arboreal habit, a case of convergent evolution. These include the glass frogs (Centrolenidae), the bush frogs (Hyperoliidae), some of the narrow-mouthed frogs (Microhylidae), and the shrub frogs (Rhacophoridae).[111] Most tree frogs are under 10 cm (4 in) in length, with long legs and long toes with adhesive pads on the tips. The surface of the toe pads is formed from a closely packed layer of flat-topped, hexagonal epidermal cells separated by grooves into which glands secrete mucus. These toe pads, moistened by the mucus, provide the grip on any wet or dry surface, including glass. The forces involved include boundary friction of the toe pad epidermis on the surface and also surface tension and viscosity.[124] Tree frogs are very acrobatic and can catch insects while hanging by one toe from a twig or clutching onto the blade of a windswept reed.[125] Some members of the subfamily Phyllomedusinae have opposable toes on their feet. The reticulated leaf frog (Phyllomedusa ayeaye) has a single opposed digit on each fore foot and two opposed digits on its hind feet. This allows it to grasp the stems of bushes as it clambers around in its riverside habitat.[126]

Gliding

[edit]

During the evolutionary history of frogs, several different groups have independently taken to the air.[127] Some frogs in the tropical rainforest are specially adapted for gliding from tree to tree or parachuting to the forest floor. Typical of them is Wallace's flying frog (Rhacophorus nigropalmatus) from Malaysia and Borneo. It has large feet with the fingertips expanded into flat adhesive discs and the digits fully webbed. Flaps of skin occur on the lateral margins of the limbs and across the tail region. With the digits splayed, the limbs outstretched, and these flaps spread, it can glide considerable distances, but is unable to undertake powered flight.[128] It can alter its direction of travel and navigate distances of up to 15 m (50 ft) between trees.[129]

Life history

[edit]
Life cycle of the green frog
(Rana clamitans)

Reproduction

[edit]

Two main types of reproduction occur in frogs, prolonged breeding and explosive breeding. In the former, adopted by the majority of species, adult frogs at certain times of year assemble at a pond, lake or stream to breed. Many frogs return to the bodies of water in which they developed as larvae. This often results in annual migrations involving thousands of individuals. In explosive breeders, mature adult frogs arrive at breeding sites in response to certain trigger factors such as rainfall occurring in an arid area. In these frogs, mating and spawning take place promptly and the speed of larval growth is rapid in order to make use of the ephemeral pools before they dry up.[130]

Among prolonged breeders, males usually arrive at the breeding site first and remain there for some time whereas females tend to arrive later and depart soon after they have spawned. This means that males outnumber females at the water's edge and defend territories from which they expel other males. They advertise their presence by calling, often alternating their croaks with neighbouring frogs. Larger, stronger males tend to have deeper calls and maintain higher quality territories. Females select their mates at least partly on the basis of the depth of their voice.[131] In some species there are satellite males who have no territory and do not call. They may intercept females that are approaching a calling male or take over a vacated territory. Calling is an energy-sapping activity. Sometimes the two roles are reversed and a calling male gives up its territory and becomes a satellite.[130]

Male and female common toads (Bufo bufo) in amplexus

In explosive breeders, the first male that finds a suitable breeding location, such as a temporary pool, calls loudly and other frogs of both sexes converge on the pool. Explosive breeders tend to call in unison creating a chorus that can be heard from far away. The spadefoot toads (Scaphiopus spp.) of North America fall into this category. Mate selection and courtship is not as important as speed in reproduction. In some years, suitable conditions may not occur and the frogs may go for two or more years without breeding.[130] Some female New Mexico spadefoot toads (Spea multiplicata) only spawn half of the available eggs at a time, perhaps retaining some in case a better reproductive opportunity arises later.[132]

At the breeding site, the male mounts the female and grips her tightly round the body. Typically, amplexus takes place in the water, the female releases her eggs and the male covers them with sperm; fertilisation is external. In many species such as the Great Plains toad (Bufo cognatus), the male restrains the eggs with his back feet, holding them in place for about three minutes.[130] Members of the West African genus Nimbaphrynoides are unique among frogs in that they are viviparous; Limnonectes larvaepartus, Eleutherodactylus jasperi and members of the Tanzanian genus Nectophrynoides are the only frogs known to be ovoviviparous. In these species, fertilisation is internal and females give birth to fully developed juvenile frogs, except L. larvaepartus, which give birth to tadpoles.[133][134][135]

Life cycle

[edit]

Eggs / frogspawn

[edit]
Frogspawn

Frogs may lay their eggs as clumps, surface films, strings, or individually. Around half of species deposit eggs in water, others lay eggs in vegetation, on the ground or in excavations.[136][137][138] The tiny yellow-striped pygmy eleuth (Eleutherodactylus limbatus) lays eggs singly, burying them in moist soil.[139] The smoky jungle frog (Leptodactylus pentadactylus) makes a nest of foam in a hollow. The eggs hatch when the nest is flooded, or the tadpoles may complete their development in the foam if flooding does not occur.[140] The red-eyed treefrog (Agalychnis callidryas) deposits its eggs on a leaf above a pool and when they hatch, the larvae fall into the water below.[141]

In certain species, such as the wood frog (Rana sylvatica), symbiotic unicellular green algae are present in the gelatinous material. It is thought that these may benefit the developing larvae by providing them with extra oxygen through photosynthesis.[142] The interior of globular egg clusters of the wood frog has also been found to be up to 6 °C (11 °F) warmer than the surrounding water and this speeds up the development of the larvae.[143] The larvae developing in the eggs can detect vibrations caused by nearby predatory wasps or snakes, and will hatch early to avoid being eaten.[144] In general, the length of the egg stage depends on the species and the environmental conditions. Aquatic eggs normally hatch within one week when the capsule splits as a result of enzymes released by the developing larvae.[145]

Direct development, where eggs hatch into juveniles like small adults, is also known in many frogs, for example, Ischnocnema henselii,[146] Eleutherodactylus coqui,[147] and Raorchestes ochlandrae and Raorchestes chalazodes.[148]

Tadpoles

[edit]
Frogspawn development

The larvae that emerge from the eggs are known as tadpoles (or occasionally polliwogs). Tadpoles lack eyelids and limbs, and have cartilaginous skeletons, gills for respiration (external gills at first, internal gills later), and tails they use for swimming.[117] As a general rule, free-living larvae are fully aquatic, but at least one species (Nannophrys ceylonensis) has semiterrestrial tadpoles which live among wet rocks.[149][150]

From early in its development, a gill pouch covers the tadpole's gills and front legs. The lungs soon start to develop and are used as an accessory breathing organ. Some species go through metamorphosis while still inside the egg and hatch directly into small frogs. Tadpoles lack true teeth, but the jaws in most species have two elongated, parallel rows of small, keratinized structures called keradonts in their upper jaws. Their lower jaws usually have three rows of keradonts surrounded by a horny beak, but the number of rows can vary and the exact arrangements of mouth parts provide a means for species identification.[145] In the Pipidae, with the exception of Hymenochirus, the tadpoles have paired anterior barbels, which make them resemble small catfish.[116] Their tails are stiffened by a notochord, but does not contain any bony or cartilaginous elements except for a few vertebrae at the base which forms the urostyle during metamorphosis. This has been suggested as an adaptation to their lifestyles; because the transformation into frogs happens very fast, the tail is made of soft tissue only, as bone and cartilage take a much longer time to be broken down and absorbed. The tail fin and tip is fragile and will easily tear, which is seen as an adaptation to escape from predators which try to grasp them by the tail.[151]

Tadpoles are typically herbivorous, feeding mostly on algae, including diatoms filtered from the water through the gills. Some species are carnivorous at the tadpole stage, eating insects, smaller tadpoles, and fish. The Cuban tree frog (Osteopilus septentrionalis) is one of a number of species in which the tadpoles can be cannibalistic. Tadpoles that develop legs early may be eaten by the others, so late developers may have better long-term survival prospects.[152]

Tadpoles are highly vulnerable to being eaten by fish, newts, predatory diving beetles, and birds, particularly water birds, such as storks and herons and domestic ducks. Some tadpoles, including those of the cane toad (Rhinella marina), are poisonous. The tadpole stage may be as short as a week in explosive breeders or it may last through one or more winters followed by metamorphosis in the spring.[153]

Metamorphosis

[edit]

At the end of the tadpole stage, a frog undergoes metamorphosis in which its body makes a sudden transition into the adult form. This metamorphosis typically lasts only 24 hours, and is initiated by production of the hormone thyroxine. This causes different tissues to develop in different ways. The principal changes that take place include the development of the lungs and the disappearance of the gills and gill pouch, making the front legs visible. The lower jaw transforms into the big mandible of the carnivorous adult, and the long, spiral gut of the herbivorous tadpole is replaced by the typical short gut of a predator.[145] Homeostatic feedback control of food intake is largely absent, making tadpoles eat constantly when food is present. But shortly before and during metamorphosis the sensation of hunger is suppressed, and they stop eating while their gut and internal organs are reorganised and prepared for a different diet.[154][155] Also the gut microbiota changes, from being similar to that of fish to resembling that of amniotes.[156] Exceptions are carnivorous tadpoles like Lepidobatrachus laevis, which has a gut already adapted to a diet similar to that of adults. These continue to eat during metamorphosis.[157] The nervous system becomes adapted for hearing and stereoscopic vision, and for new methods of locomotion and feeding.[145] The eyes are repositioned higher up on the head and the eyelids and associated glands are formed. The eardrum, middle ear, and inner ear are developed. The skin becomes thicker and tougher, the lateral line system is lost, and skin glands are developed.[145] The final stage is the disappearance of the tail, but this takes place rather later, the tissue being used to produce a spurt of growth in the limbs.[158] Frogs are at their most vulnerable to predators when they are undergoing metamorphosis. At this time, the tail is being lost and locomotion by means of limbs is only just becoming established.[111]

Adults

[edit]
A Xenopus laevis froglet after metamorphosis

Adult frogs may live in or near water, but few are fully aquatic.[159] Almost all frog species are carnivorous as adults, preying on invertebrates, including insects, crabs, spiders, mites, worms, snails, and slugs. A few of the larger ones may eat other frogs, small mammals and reptiles, and fish.[160][161] A few species also eat plant matter; the tree frog Xenohyla truncata is partly herbivorous, its diet including a large proportion of fruit, floral structures and nectar.[162][163] Leptodactylus mystaceus has been found to eat plants,[164][165] and folivory occurs in Euphlyctis hexadactylus, with plants constituting 79.5% of its diet by volume.[166] Many frogs use their sticky tongues to catch prey, while others simply grab them with their mouths.[167] Adult frogs are themselves attacked by many predators. The northern leopard frog (Rana pipiens) is eaten by herons, hawks, fish, large salamanders, snakes, raccoons, skunks, mink, bullfrogs, and other animals.[168]

A trophic pyramid showing frogs as primary predators

Frogs are primary predators and an important part of the food web. Being cold-blooded, they make efficient use of the food they eat with little energy being used for metabolic processes, while the rest is transformed into biomass. They are themselves eaten by secondary predators and are the primary terrestrial consumers of invertebrates, most of which feed on plants. By reducing herbivory, they play a part in increasing the growth of plants and are thus part of a delicately balanced ecosystem.[169]

Little is known about the longevity of frogs and toads in the wild, but some can live for many years. Skeletochronology is a method of examining bones to determine age. Using this method, the ages of mountain yellow-legged frogs (Rana muscosa) were studied, the phalanges of the toes showing seasonal lines where growth slows in winter. The oldest frogs had ten bands, so their age was believed to be 14 years, including the four-year tadpole stage.[170] Captive frogs and toads have been recorded as living for up to 40 years, an age achieved by a European common toad (Bufo bufo). The cane toad (Rhinella marina) has been known to survive 24 years in captivity, and the American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) 14 years.[171] Frogs from temperate climates hibernate during the winter, and four species are known to be able to withstand freezing during this time, including the wood frog (Rana sylvatica).[172]

Parental care

[edit]
Male common midwife toad (Alytes obstetricans) with eggs
Pouched frog (Assa darlingtoni)

Although care of offspring is poorly understood in frogs, up to an estimated 20% of amphibian species may care for their young in some way.[173] The evolution of parental care in frogs is driven primarily by the size of the water body in which they breed. Those that breed in smaller water bodies tend to have greater and more complex parental care behaviour.[174] Because predation of eggs and larvae is high in large water bodies, some frog species started to lay their eggs on land. Once this happened, the desiccating terrestrial environment demands that one or both parents keep them moist to ensure their survival.[175] The subsequent need to transport hatched tadpoles to a water body required an even more intense form of parental care.[174]

In small pools, predators are mostly absent and competition between tadpoles becomes the variable that constrains their survival. Certain frog species avoid this competition by making use of smaller phytotelmata (water-filled leaf axils or small woody cavities) as sites for depositing a few tadpoles.[176] While these smaller rearing sites are free from competition, they also lack sufficient nutrients to support a tadpole without parental assistance. Frog species that changed from the use of larger to smaller phytotelmata have evolved a strategy of providing their offspring with nutritive but unfertilised eggs.[174] The female strawberry poison-dart frog (Oophaga pumilio) lays her eggs on the forest floor. The male frog guards them from predation and carries water in his cloaca to keep them moist. When they hatch, the female moves the tadpoles on her back to a water-holding bromeliad or other similar water body, depositing just one in each location. She visits them regularly and feeds them by laying one or two unfertilised eggs in the phytotelma, continuing to do this until the young are large enough to undergo metamorphosis.[177] The granular poison frog (Oophaga granulifera) looks after its tadpoles in a similar way.[178]

Many other diverse forms of parental care are seen in frogs. The tiny male Colostethus subpunctatus stands guard over his egg cluster, laid under a stone or log. When the eggs hatch, he transports the tadpoles on his back to a temporary pool, where he partially immerses himself in the water and one or more tadpoles drop off. He then moves on to another pool.[179] The male common midwife toad (Alytes obstetricans) carries the eggs around with him attached to his hind legs. He keeps them damp in dry weather by immersing himself in a pond, and prevents them from getting too wet in soggy vegetation by raising his hindquarters. After three to six weeks, he travels to a pond and the eggs hatch into tadpoles.[180] The tungara frog (Physalaemus pustulosus) builds a floating nest from foam to protect its eggs from predation. The foam is made from proteins and lectins, and seems to have antimicrobial properties.[181] Several pairs of frogs may form a colonial nest on a previously built raft. The eggs are laid in the centre, followed by alternate layers of foam and eggs, finishing with a foam capping.[182]

Some frogs protect their offspring inside their own bodies. Both male and female pouched frogs (Assa darlingtoni) guard their eggs, which are laid on the ground. When the eggs hatch, the male lubricates his body with the jelly surrounding them and immerses himself in the egg mass. The tadpoles wriggle into skin pouches on his side, where they develop until they metamorphose into juvenile frogs.[183] The female gastric-brooding frog (Rheobatrachus sp.) from Australia, now probably extinct, swallows her fertilised eggs, which then develop inside her stomach. She ceases to feed and stops secreting stomach acid. The tadpoles rely on the yolks of the eggs for nourishment. After six or seven weeks, they are ready for metamorphosis. The mother regurgitates the tiny frogs, which hop away from her mouth.[184] The female Darwin's frog (Rhinoderma darwinii) from Chile lays up to 40 eggs on the ground, where they are guarded by the male. When the tadpoles are about to hatch, they are engulfed by the male, which carries them around inside his much-enlarged vocal sac. Here they are immersed in a frothy, viscous liquid that contains some nourishment to supplement what they obtain from the yolks of the eggs. They remain in the sac for seven to ten weeks before undergoing metamorphosis, after which they move into the male's mouth and emerge.[185]

Defence

[edit]
The mildly toxic Ranitomeya imitator
Strawberry poison-dart frog contains numerous alkaloids which deter predators.

At first sight, frogs seem rather defenceless because of their small size, slow movement, thin skin, and lack of defensive structures, such as spines, claws or teeth. Many use camouflage to avoid detection, the skin often being spotted or streaked in neutral colours that allow a stationary frog to merge into its surroundings. Some can make prodigious leaps, often into water, that help them to evade potential attackers, while many have other defensive adaptations and strategies.[130]

The skin of many frogs contains mild toxic substances called bufotoxins to make them unpalatable to potential predators. Most toads and some frogs have large poison glands, the parotoid glands, located on the sides of their heads behind the eyes and other glands elsewhere on their bodies. These glands secrete mucus and a range of toxins that make frogs slippery to hold and distasteful or poisonous. If the noxious effect is immediate, the predator may cease its action and the frog may escape. If the effect develops more slowly, the predator may learn to avoid that species in future.[186] Poisonous frogs tend to advertise their toxicity with bright colours, an adaptive strategy known as aposematism. The poison dart frogs in the family Dendrobatidae do this. They are typically red, orange, or yellow, often with contrasting black markings on their bodies. Allobates zaparo is not poisonous, but mimics the appearance of two different toxic species with which it shares a common range in an effort to deceive predators.[187] Other species, such as the European fire-bellied toad (Bombina bombina), have their warning colour underneath. They "flash" this when attacked, adopting a pose that exposes the vivid colouring on their bellies.[4]

A common toad adopting a defensive stance

Some frogs, such as the poison dart frogs, are especially toxic. The native peoples of South America extract poison from these frogs to apply to their weapons for hunting,[188] although few species are toxic enough to be used for this purpose. At least two non-poisonous frog species in tropical America (Eleutherodactylus gaigei and Lithodytes lineatus) mimic the colouration of dart poison frogs for self-protection.[189][190] Some frogs obtain poisons from the ants and other arthropods they eat.[191] Others, such as the Australian corroboree frogs (Pseudophryne corroboree and Pseudophryne pengilleyi), can synthesize the alkaloids themselves.[192] The chemicals involved may be irritants, hallucinogens, convulsants, nerve poisons or vasoconstrictors. Many predators of frogs have become adapted to tolerate high levels of these poisons, but other creatures, including humans who handle the frogs, may be severely affected.[193]

Some frogs use bluff or deception. The European common toad (Bufo bufo) adopts a characteristic stance when attacked, inflating its body and standing with its hindquarters raised and its head lowered.[194] The bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) crouches down with eyes closed and head tipped forward when threatened. This places the parotoid glands in the most effective position, the other glands on its back begin to ooze noxious secretions and the most vulnerable parts of its body are protected.[130] Another tactic used by some frogs is to "scream", the sudden loud noise tending to startle the predator. The grey tree frog (Hyla versicolor) makes an explosive sound that sometimes repels the shrew Blarina brevicauda.[130] Although toads are avoided by many predators, the common garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) regularly feeds on them. The strategy employed by juvenile American toads (Bufo americanus) on being approached by a snake is to crouch down and remain immobile. This is usually successful, with the snake passing by and the toad remaining undetected. If it is encountered by the snake's head, however, the toad hops away before crouching defensively.[195]

Distribution

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Although frogs are most diverse in warm regions, a few species like the wood frog live at the Arctic Circle.

Frogs live on every continent except Antarctica, but they are not present on certain islands, especially those far away from continental land masses.[196][197] Many species are isolated in restricted ranges by changes of climate or inhospitable territory, such as stretches of sea, mountain ridges, deserts, forest clearance, road construction, or other human-made barriers.[198] Usually, a greater diversity of frogs occurs in tropical areas than in temperate regions, such as Europe.[199] Some frogs inhabit arid areas, such as deserts, and rely on specific adaptations to survive. Members of the Australian genus Cyclorana bury themselves underground where they create a water-impervious cocoon in which to aestivate during dry periods. Once it rains, they emerge, find a temporary pool, and breed. Egg and tadpole development is very fast compared with those of most other frogs, so breeding can be completed before the pond dries up.[200] Some frog species are adapted to a cold environment. The wood frog (Rana sylvatica), whose habitat extends into the Arctic Circle, buries itself in the ground during winter. Although much of its body freezes during this time, it maintains a high concentration of glucose in its vital organs, which protects them from damage.[54]

Conservation

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Golden toad (Bufo periglenes) – last seen in 1989

In 2006, of 4,035 species of amphibians that depend on water during some lifecycle stage, 1,356 (33.6%) were considered to be threatened. This is likely to be an underestimate because it excludes 1,427 species for which evidence was insufficient to assess their status.[201] Frog populations have declined dramatically since the 1950s. More than one-third of frog species are considered to be threatened with extinction, and more than 120 species are believed to have become extinct since the 1980s.[202] Among these species are the gastric-brooding frogs of Australia and the golden toad of Costa Rica. The latter is of particular concern to scientists because it inhabited the pristine Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve and its population crashed in 1987, along with about 20 other frog species in the area. This could not be linked directly to human activities, such as deforestation, and was outside the range of normal fluctuations in population size.[203] Elsewhere, habitat loss is a significant cause of frog population decline, as are pollutants, climate change, increased UVB radiation, and the introduction of non-native predators and competitors.[204] A Canadian study conducted in 2006 suggested heavy traffic in their environment was a larger threat to frog populations than was habitat loss.[205] Emerging infectious diseases, including chytridiomycosis and ranavirus, are also devastating populations.[206][207]

Many environmental scientists believe amphibians, including frogs, are good biological indicators of broader ecosystem health because of their intermediate positions in food chains, their permeable skins, and typically biphasic lives (aquatic larvae and terrestrial adults).[208] It appears that species with both aquatic eggs and larvae are most affected by the decline, while those with direct development are the most resistant.[209]

Deformed mink frog with an extra left leg

Frog mutations and genetic defects have increased since the 1990s. These often include missing legs or extra legs. Various causes have been identified or hypothesized, including an increase in ultraviolet radiation affecting the spawn on the surface of ponds, chemical contamination from pesticides and fertilizers, and parasites such as the trematode Ribeiroia ondatrae. Probably all these are involved in a complex way as stressors, environmental factors contributing to rates of disease, and vulnerability to attack by parasites. Malformations impair mobility and the individuals may not survive to adulthood. An increase in the number of frogs eaten by birds may actually increase the likelihood of parasitism of other frogs, because the trematode's complex lifecycle includes the ramshorn snail and several intermediate hosts such as birds.[210][211]

In a few cases, captive breeding programs have been established and have largely been successful.[212][213] The World Association of Zoos and Aquariums named 2008 as the "Year of the Frog" in order to draw attention to the conservation issues faced by them.[214]

The cane toad (Rhinella marina) is a very adaptable species native to South and Central America. In the 1930s, it was introduced into Puerto Rico, and later various other islands in the Pacific and Caribbean region, as a biological pest control agent.[215] In 1935, 3000 toads were liberated in the sugar cane fields of Queensland, Australia, in an attempt to control cane beetles such as Dermolepida albohirtum, the larvae of which damage and kill the canes. Initial results in many of these countries were positive, but it later became apparent that the toads upset the ecological balance in their new environments. They bred freely, competed with native frog species, ate bees and other harmless native invertebrates, had few predators in their adopted habitats, and poisoned pets, carnivorous birds, and mammals. In many of these countries, they are now regarded both as pests and invasive species, and scientists are looking for a biological method to control them.[216]

Human uses

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Culinary

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French cuisses de grenouille

Frog legs are eaten by humans in many parts of the world. Indonesia is the world's largest exporter of frog meat, exporting more than 5,000 tonnes of frog meat each year, mostly to France, Belgium and Luxembourg.[217] Originally, they were supplied from local wild populations, but overexploitation led to a diminution in the supply. This resulted in the development of frog farming and a global trade in frogs. The main importing countries are France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and the United States, while the chief exporting nations are Indonesia and China.[218] The annual global trade in the American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana), mostly farmed in China, varies between 1200 and 2400 tonnes.[219]

The mountain chicken frog, so-called as it tastes of chicken, is now endangered, in part due to human consumption, and was a major food choice of the Dominicans.[220] Raccoon, opossum, partridges, prairie chicken, and frogs were among the fare Mark Twain recorded as part of American cuisine.[221]

Scientific research

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In November 1970, NASA sent two bullfrogs into space for six days during the Orbiting Frog Otolith mission to test weightlessness.

Frogs are used for dissections in high school and university anatomy classes, often first being injected with coloured substances to enhance contrasts among the biological systems. This practice is declining due to animal welfare concerns, and "digital frogs" are now available for virtual dissection.[222]

Frogs have served as experimental animals throughout the history of science. Eighteenth-century biologist Luigi Galvani discovered the link between electricity and the nervous system by studying frogs. He created one of the first tools for measuring electric current out of a frog leg.[223] In 1852, H. F. Stannius used a frog's heart in a procedure called a Stannius ligature to demonstrate the ventricle and atria beat independently of each other and at different rates.[224] The African clawed frog or platanna (Xenopus laevis) was first widely used in laboratories in pregnancy tests in the first half of the 20th century. A sample of urine from a pregnant woman injected into a female frog induces it to lay eggs, a discovery made by English zoologist Lancelot Hogben. This is because a hormone, human chorionic gonadotropin, is present in substantial quantities in the urine of women during pregnancy.[225] In 1952, Robert Briggs and Thomas J. King cloned a frog by somatic cell nuclear transfer. This same technique was later used to create Dolly the sheep, and their experiment was the first time a successful nuclear transplantation had been accomplished in higher animals.[226]

Frogs are used in cloning research and other branches of embryology. Frogs of the genus Xenopus are used as a model organism in developmental biology because their embryos are large and easy to manipulate, they are readily obtainable, and can easily be kept in the laboratory.[227] Xenopus laevis is increasingly being displaced by its smaller relative, Xenopus tropicalis, which reaches its reproductive age in five months rather than the one to two years for X. laevis,[228] thus facilitating faster studies across generations.

Genomes of Xenopus laevis, X. tropicalis, Rana catesbeiana, Rhinella marina, and Nanorana parkeri have been sequenced and deposited in the NCBI Genome database.[229]

Pharmaceutical

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Golden poison frog (Phyllobates terribilis)

Because frog toxins are extraordinarily diverse, they have raised the interest of biochemists as a "natural pharmacy". The alkaloid epibatidine, a painkiller 200 times more potent than morphine, is made by some species of poison dart frogs. Other chemicals isolated from the skins of frogs may offer resistance to HIV infection.[230] Dart poisons are under active investigation for their potential as therapeutic drugs.[231]

It has long been suspected that pre-Columbian Mesoamericans used a toxic secretion produced by the cane toad as a hallucinogen, but more likely they used substances secreted by the Colorado River toad (Bufo alvarius). These contain bufotenin (5-MeO-DMT), a psychoactive compound that has been used in modern times as a recreational drug. Typically, the skin secretions are dried and then smoked.[232] Illicit drug use by licking the skin of a toad has been reported in the media, but this may be an urban myth.[233]

Exudations from the skin of the golden poison frog (Phyllobates terribilis) are traditionally used by native Colombians to poison the darts they use for hunting. The tip of the projectile is rubbed over the back of the frog and the dart is launched from a blowgun. The combination of the two alkaloid toxins batrachotoxin and homobatrachotoxin is so powerful, one frog contains enough poison to kill an estimated 22,000 mice.[234] Two other species, the Kokoe poison dart frog (Phyllobates aurotaenia) and the black-legged dart frog (Phyllobates bicolor) are also used for this purpose. These are less toxic and less abundant than the golden poison frog. They are impaled on pointed sticks and may be heated over a fire to maximise the quantity of poison that can be transferred to the dart.[234]

Moche frog sculpture

Cultural significance

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Frogs have been featured in mythology, fairy tales and popular culture. In traditional Chinese myths, the world rests on a giant frog, who would try to swallow the moon, causing the lunar eclipse. Frogs have been featured in religion, folklore, and popular culture. The ancient Egyptians depicted the god Heqet, protector of newborns, with the head of a frog. For the Mayans, frogs represented water, crops, fertility and birth and were associated with the god Chaac. In the Bible, Moses unleashes a plague of frogs on the Egyptians. Medieval Europeans associated frogs and toads with evil and witchcraft.[235] The Brothers Grimm fairy tale The Frog Prince features a princess taking in a frog and it turning into a handsome prince.[236] In modern culture, frogs may take a comedic or hapless role, such as Mr. Toad of the 1908 novel The Wind in the Willows, Michigan J. Frog of Warner Bros. Cartoons, the Muppet Kermit the Frog and in the game Frogger.[237]

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Frogs comprise the order Anura, a diverse of tailless amphibians within the class Amphibia, distinguished by their short bodies, protruding eyes, elongated hindlimbs adapted for leaping, and webbed feet suited for swimming. As ectothermic vertebrates lacking scales, frogs typically inhabit moist environments across terrestrial, arboreal, and aquatic habitats worldwide, excluding polar extremes and some oceanic islands. Their defining life history involves complete , wherein aquatic, herbivorous larvae—hatched from gelatinous egg masses—undergo profound physiological remodeling over weeks to months, developing lungs, limbs, and carnivorous adaptations to emerge as adults capable of vocalizing for reproduction and dispersing on land. With thousands of species representing over 80% of extant amphibians, frogs play pivotal ecological roles as voracious insectivores that regulate pest populations, including mosquitoes, while serving as prey for birds, reptiles, , and mammals, thereby facilitating nutrient cycling and maintaining stability in wetlands and forests. However, empirical assessments reveal severe population declines across taxa, driven primarily by , infectious diseases like , and intensifying climate effects such as altered and regimes, with over 40% of species now threatened and rates exceeding those of other vertebrates. These dynamics underscore frogs' sensitivity as bioindicators of , reflecting causal pressures from anthropogenic land use and global environmental shifts rather than isolated factors.

Etymology and Taxonomy

Etymology

The English word frog originates from frogga, first attested in texts from the , derived from Proto-Germanic *fruskô, likely an onomatopoeic formation imitating the animal's croaking sound or its hopping movement. This root is cognate with froskr and frosk, both denoting the , and appears in as frogge by the 13th century. The term's Proto-Indo-European precursor may relate to *preu-sk-, associated with jumping or leaping actions, though exact reconstruction remains speculative due to limited early attestations. The scientific order name Anura was coined in New Latin from elements an- (privative prefix meaning "without") and ourá ("tail"), emphasizing the characteristic absence of a in adult frogs, distinguishing them from tailed amphibians like salamanders. This , formalized in the early , underscores the morphological focus of Linnaean classification on observable traits such as taillessness post-metamorphosis.

Taxonomy and Classification

Frogs constitute the order Anura within the class Amphibia, which belongs to the subphylum Vertebrata in the phylum Chordata and kingdom Animalia. Anura forms one of three extant orders in the subclass Lissamphibia, alongside Caudata (salamanders) and Gymnophiona (caecilians), with phylogenetic analyses confirming Lissamphibia as a monophyletic group originating from a common ancestor distinct from other amphibians. As of October 2025, Anura encompasses 7,885 described species distributed across 57 families and 503 genera, representing the majority of the approximately 8,941 known amphibian species worldwide. This classification reflects ongoing refinements driven by molecular phylogenetic studies, which have restructured family boundaries; for instance, earlier groupings like the traditional suborders Archaeobatrachia, Mesobatrachia, and have been largely supplanted by clade-based arrangements emphasizing , with Neobatrachia comprising over 99% of anuran diversity. Prominent families include (tree frogs, over 1,000 species), Strabomantidae (direct-developing frogs, around 800 species), (narrow-mouthed frogs, approximately 750 species), and Bufonidae (true toads, about 650 species), which together account for a substantial portion of anuran concentrated in tropical regions. The order's taxonomy continues to evolve with new discoveries and genetic data, with AmphibiaWeb and the Amphibian Species of the World database serving as primary repositories for updated synonymies and distributions, though discrepancies arise from varying acceptance of or cryptic species delimited by .

Evolutionary History

Phylogeny

Frogs belong to the order Anura, which forms one of three extant clades within the subclass , alongside (salamanders) and Gymnophiona (caecilians). is monophyletic, originating in the around 250 million years ago, with molecular and morphological evidence supporting a dissorophoid temnospondyl origin from labyrinthodonts. Within , Anura and together form the Batrachia, which is the to Gymnophiona; this topology is corroborated by mitogenomic, nuclear, and fossil data, resolving earlier debates favoring a salamander-caecilian . The internal phylogeny of Anura reflects a basal grade of "archaeobatrachian" lineages, followed by the derived clades Mesobatrachia and , with Archaeobatrachia being paraphyletic as it excludes these groups while encompassing primitive families such as Ascaphidae, , and Leiopelmatidae. Mesobatrachia, comprising about 5% of anuran species, includes superfamilies Pipoidea (e.g., Pipidae) and Pelobatoidea (e.g., Pelobatidae), characterized by plesiomorphic traits like free larval gills and direct development in some taxa. Pipanura, the node uniting Mesobatrachia and Neobatrachia, represents the majority of frog diversity, with Neobatrachia alone encompassing over 90% of the approximately 7,000 extant species across suborders like , Microhyloidea, and Ranoidea. Phylogenomic analyses indicate that Neobatrachia underwent rapid diversification near the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary around 66 million years ago, giving rise to three principal radiations that account for roughly 88% of modern frog species, driven by ecological opportunities post-extinction. Basal anurans diverged earlier, with crown-group Anura emerging by the (about 160 million years ago), supported by calibrated molecular clocks and fossil calibrations. These relationships are robust across multi-locus datasets, though fine-scale resolutions within , such as Terraranae or Natatanura, continue to refine with expanded phylogenomics.

Fossil Record

The fossil record of frogs, belonging to the order Anura within , begins in the period, with the oldest known specimen being Triadobatrachus massinoti from deposits in dated to approximately 247 million years ago. This stem-group salientian, measuring about 10 cm in length, retained primitive traits such as a vertebral column with 14 presacral vertebrae—compared to the typical 8-9 in modern frogs—and lacked full tail loss in adults, indicating a transitional form between earlier amphibians and crown-group Anura. Its discovery supports an early divergence of the frog lineage following the Permian-Triassic extinction event, though the scarcity of contemporaneous fossils limits resolution of its precise affinities. Subsequent Late Triassic records, around 215-220 million years ago, emerge from the Chinle Formation in , representing the earliest equatorial evidence of , the clade encompassing stem and crown frogs. These microvertebrate fossils, including ilia and other elements, exhibit features bridging Triadobatrachus and later forms, such as elongated ilia suited for jumping, and suggest frogs inhabited diverse continental environments near the equator during the stage. In contrast, the Early Jurassic yields more complete taxa like Prosalirus bitis from the Kayenta Formation in , dated to about 183 million years ago, which displays advanced salientian characteristics including reduced vertebrae and enhanced hindlimb proportions, marking a shift toward modern anuran bauplans. Mesozoic frog fossils remain fragmentary and geographically biased toward , with notable finds including Liaobatrachus from the in and various neobatrachians from and , reflecting gradual diversification amid global climatic shifts. The record improves markedly in the , particularly post-Eocene, with abundant skeletal material documenting explosive radiation into extant families, though gaps persist due to frogs' small size, delicate bones, and preference for taphonomically challenging aquatic or humid habitats. Molecular estimates place crown Anura's origin over 200 million years ago, aligning with but extending beyond the sparse fossil evidence, highlighting preservational biases rather than true rarity.

Anatomy and Physiology

Feet and Legs

The hind limbs of frogs are elongated and muscular, adapted primarily for jumping, with powerful extensors generating high force outputs during propulsion. These limbs feature a femur connected to a fused tibiofibula bone, which enhances stability and power transmission during extension. Key muscles, such as the plantaris, operate near optimal lengths on the descending limb of the force-length curve, utilizing elastic energy storage in tendons for efficient leaps. Forelimbs are shorter and less robust, serving mainly for stabilization, landing absorption, and support during locomotion, with musculature focused on flexion and shock mitigation upon touchdown. All anuran species possess four limbs, with hands bearing four fingers and feet five toes, though digit lengths and phalangeal formulas vary phylogenetically. Hind limb morphology correlates with locomotor modes, including larger hip and shank muscles in jumpers compared to swimmers or burrowers. Feet exhibit diverse adaptations reflecting ecological niches: extensive in aquatic species increases surface area for in , resulting from differential interdigital tissue growth during development. Arboreal frogs often have expanded digital pads or discs with mucous glands for to vertical surfaces, while terrestrial feature keratinized tubercles or spade-like metatarsal structures for digging. These variations in foot and skeletal elements, such as additional sesamoids, facilitate habitat-specific traction and force distribution. During jumping, the mechanism involves initial stretching tendons, storing released rapidly for takeoff, enabling accelerations up to 100 g in some species. Hind limb muscles also influence architecture, reinforcing resistance to bending stresses from locomotion. In landing, forelimbs and feet play critical roles in energy dissipation through digit flexion and compliance, minimizing injury across species with differing ecomorphologies.

Skin

The skin of frogs consists of two primary layers: a thin outer and a thicker inner . The features with embedded mucous and granular glands, while the contains , blood vessels, and cells. This structure renders the skin highly vascularized and permeable, facilitating direct exchange between the environment and the frog's . Frog skin performs essential physiological roles, including , where oxygen diffuses inward and carbon dioxide outward across the moist membrane, supplementing or even replacing lung-based in many species. The skin's permeability also supports ; in aquatic environments, it enables active uptake of sodium and chloride ions to counter dilution from freshwater, while on land, it minimizes evaporative water loss through secretions that form a barrier. Mucous glands continuously produce a lubricating film to maintain hydration and elasticity, preventing and aiding in via evaporative cooling. Granular glands embedded in the skin synthesize and store defensive secretions ranging from distasteful to potent toxins, which are expelled in response to threats, deterring predators through . Coloration and patterns arise from dermal chromatophores and epidermal pigments, providing against substrates like leaf litter or bark. To preserve permeability and remove accumulated microbes or debris, frogs periodically molt, shedding the outer epidermal layer—often every few days in moist habitats—by loosening it with enzymes and consuming the cast . This sloughing process reduces bacterial abundance on the surface, acting as an innate immune mechanism.

Respiration and Circulation

Frogs utilize three principal respiratory mechanisms: buccopharyngeal respiration, , and pulmonary respiration. Buccopharyngeal respiration occurs across the moist lining of the buccal cavity, where oxygen diffuses into the blood vessels of the mouth and throat while is expelled, serving as a supplementary process especially during rest. Cutaneous respiration involves the diffusion of gases directly through the thin, vascularized, and perpetually moist skin, which can account for a significant portion of oxygen uptake—up to 20-50% in some species under aquatic conditions—and is facilitated by a dense network beneath the . This mode is vital for frogs in hypoxic environments or during but requires constant moisture to prevent and maintain permeability. Pulmonary respiration, the primary mode on land, relies on simple, sac-like lungs inflated via a mechanism rather than a diaphragm. During inspiration, the nostrils close, the floor of the mouth depresses to draw air into the oral cavity, and then elevates to force air through the into the lungs under positive pressure; expiration follows passive elastic recoil of the lungs and body wall. This process is rhythmic and can be augmented during activity, with air also periodically refreshed in the buccal cavity. The circulatory system supports these respiratory functions through a partially divided double circulation via a three-chambered heart comprising two atria and a single ventricle, enabling separation of pulmonary and systemic circuits with minimal mixing. Deoxygenated blood from the body enters the right atrium via the sinus venosus, while oxygenated blood from the lungs enters the left atrium; both converge in the ventricle before being directed by the conus arteriosus—oxygenated blood preferentially to the systemic aorta and deoxygenated to the pulmonary artery due to spiral valve action and pressure gradients. This configuration, while less efficient than the four-chambered hearts of higher vertebrates, suffices for the amphibious lifestyle by oxygenating blood for cutaneous and pulmonary exchange before systemic distribution. Frogs also possess accessory lymph hearts that propel lymph fluid, aiding in fluid balance and preventing edema in the permeable skin.

Digestion and Excretion

Adult frogs capture prey using a rapidly protrusible tongue coated with viscous mucus and saliva, which adheres to insects and small invertebrates before retraction into the buccal cavity for swallowing without mastication. Vomerine and maxillary teeth assist in holding prey but do not chew it. Swallowed food travels via the short esophagus to the J-shaped stomach, where cardiac and pyloric glands secrete hydrochloric acid (pH approximately 2-3) and pepsinogen, initiating extracellular protein hydrolysis into peptides and amino acids over 2-4 hours depending on prey size. The resulting chyme passes through the pyloric sphincter into the duodenum, receiving alkaline pancreatic juice containing trypsin, amylase, and lipase, as well as bile from the liver's gallbladder for fat emulsification. Further enzymatic breakdown and absorption occur in the short, coiled , optimized for rapid processing of protein-rich meals, with villi enhancing surface area for uptake of , glucose, and fatty acids. Undigested residues enter the for reabsorption before expulsion as feces via the . Tadpoles exhibit a longer, herbivore-adapted gut for algal , which shortens and restructures during to accommodate carnivory. The features paired, elongated mesonephros kidneys that filter plasma at rates up to 20-30 ml/kg/hour, converting to less toxic via the ornithine-urea cycle, yielding with 1-5% concentration. Ureters transport to a thin-walled for storage and selective reabsorption of water, ions, and metabolites like glucose in freeze-tolerant species such as Rana sylvatica. Mature urine is voided intermittently through the , a multifunctional chamber shared with digestive and reproductive tracts, enabling during terrestrial phases. Aquatic tadpoles primarily excrete osmotically across gills and , transitioning to ureotelism post-metamorphosis for terrestrial toxicity avoidance. The permeable supplements renal by diffusing 10-20% of nitrogenous wastes directly.

Reproductive System

The reproductive systems of frogs (order Anura) are dioecious, with males and females exhibiting distinct gonadal structures adapted primarily for external fertilization and aquatic or semi-aquatic egg deposition. In males, the paired testes are ovoid or spherical organs located dorsally along the kidneys, typically measuring 2-5 mm in length in common species like Rana temporaria, and produce spermatozoa through spermatogenesis, a process involving spermatogonia proliferation and maturation into spermatids within seminiferous lobules. Sperm are transported via efferent ductules into the anterior kidney region, where they mix with urinary fluids and exit through the cloaca during amplexus, without a dedicated copulatory organ; some species possess a cloacal protuberance or eversible pseudopenis for sperm deposition, though this is absent in most anurans. In females, the paired ovaries are suspended in the near the kidneys and contain numerous oocytes at various developmental stages, with accumulating yolk reserves essential for embryonic nutrition; mature oocytes can number 1,000 to 20,000 per depending on species, as seen in Xenopus laevis where clutches average 1,000-1,500 eggs. Eggs pass from ovaries into convoluted oviducts, which are divided into infundibular, albumen-secreting, vitelline membrane-forming, and jelly-coating regions that envelop oocytes in protective layers, facilitating and defense against or predation before reaching the . The serves as a common chamber for release, urinary, and digestive outputs in both sexes. Fertilization is predominantly external and occurs via amplexus, where the male clasps the female's trunk or axillary region, stimulating egg extrusion into water followed by simultaneous sperm release to achieve high fertilization rates of 50-90% in species like Bufo bufo; this process relies on sperm motility enhanced by osmotic activation in dilute media. Rare exceptions include internal fertilization in basal taxa such as Ascaphus truei, where a tail-like extension aids sperm transfer, but this represents less than 1% of anuran diversity and does not alter the typical oviparous strategy. Gonadal cycles are hormonally regulated, with seasonal recrudescence driven by photoperiod, temperature, and gonadotropins, ensuring synchrony with favorable breeding conditions.

Nervous System

The nervous system of frogs, or anurans, consists of a (CNS) comprising the and , and a (PNS) including cranial and spinal nerves along with . The CNS coordinates sensory input, motor output, and reflexive behaviors essential for locomotion, predation, and environmental in both aquatic and terrestrial habitats. The is small and enclosed in a bony cranium, with forming the outer layer and the inner core, reflecting a simpler organization compared to higher vertebrates. It divides into three main regions: the (prosencephalon), including olfactory lobes for smell detection, paired cerebral hemispheres for integration, and with optic chiasma; the (mesencephalon) dominated by optic lobes for visual processing; and the (rhombencephalon) featuring a small for coordination and for vital functions like respiration. This structure supports acute sensory responses, such as prey detection via vision and olfaction, though the is relatively underdeveloped, limiting complex . The spinal cord extends from the medulla through the vertebral column, featuring an H-shaped core surrounded by , with dorsal roots carrying sensory afferents and ventral roots motor efferents that unite into mixed spinal nerves. In adult frogs, there are typically 10 pairs of spinal nerves, innervating limbs and trunk for reflexes like the withdrawal response. The cord's segmental organization facilitates rapid, localized control of and . The PNS includes 10 pairs of arising from the : olfactory (I, sensory), optic (II, sensory), oculomotor (III, motor), trochlear (IV, motor), trigeminal (V, mixed), abducens (VI, motor), (VII, mixed), vestibulocochlear (VIII, sensory), glossopharyngeal (IX, mixed), and vagus (X, mixed). These handle head-specific functions, such as , sensation, and visceral control via the vagus. Sympathetic chains, formed by ganglia along the spinal , regulate involuntary processes like heartbeat and glandular through preganglionic and postganglionic fibers. This division enables decentralized autonomic responses alongside centralized processing.

Sensory Systems

Frogs exhibit sensory systems finely tuned for detecting prey, predators, and mates in diverse environments, with vision and audition dominating in most species due to their reliance on rapid visual cues for hunting and acoustic signals for reproduction. The eyes, large and protruding from the dorsal surface of the skull, enable a panoramic field of view approaching 360 degrees horizontally, compensating for the frogs' limited neck mobility. This positioning allows simultaneous monitoring of terrestrial and aerial threats while the head remains stationary. Structurally, the frog eye includes a transparent cornea, a spherical or double-convex lens for accommodation, an iris controlling light entry, and a retina with photoreceptors specialized for detecting edges and movement rather than fine detail or color in low light. A transparent nictitating membrane sweeps across the cornea during blinking or submersion, protecting the eye while preserving underwater vision by minimizing refraction differences between air and water. Pupil morphology varies phylogenetically, with shapes such as vertical slits in arboreal species enhancing depth perception for jumping, having evolved independently over 116 times in anurans. Audition in frogs primarily occurs through the tympanic , where the external tympanum—a taut, circular membrane located posterolaterally to each eye—vibrates in response to airborne sound pressures, transmitting mechanical energy via the (stapes homolog) to the oval window of the . The 's amphibian papilla detects low-frequency sounds (typically 100-1000 Hz) relevant for conspecific calls, while the basilar papilla handles higher frequencies up to several kHz, aiding directional localization during chorusing. In some aquatic or species like pipid frogs, the tympanum is reduced or absent, shifting reliance to opercularis muscle coupling or direct lung cavity resonance for sound detection. This system supports frequency-specific tuning, with males exhibiting enhanced sensitivity to advertisement call frequencies of their , facilitating mate attraction over distances of meters to kilometers. Olfaction plays a supplementary role, particularly in low-visibility habitats, with paired external nares connecting to the nasal cavity's , where chemoreceptors bind volatile and water-soluble odorants to trigger firing in fibers. In species inhabiting murky waters, such as pipids, olfactory cues detect distant prey chemicals before visual confirmation, integrating with to sample air-water interfaces. A , accessory to the main , processes pheromones for reproductive behaviors, showing in sensitivity during breeding seasons. Somatosensory input arises from integumentary mechanoreceptors and nociceptors distributed across the skin, enabling detection of tactile stimuli, gradients (via free nerve endings), and vibrations, which inform burrowing, predator evasion, and substrate exploration. stages retain a system for hydrodynamic sensing, absent in metamorphosed adults, reflecting ontogenetic shifts toward aerial dominance. These modalities integrate in the , with and nuclei processing multisensory inputs to drive reflexive behaviors like prey-strike snapping.

Locomotion and Movement

Jumping

![Colostethus flotator jumping][float-right] Frog jumping is propelled primarily by the rapid extension of the elongated s, which store and release through tendons and muscles during takeoff. The process divides into takeoff, aerial, and landing phases, with hindlimb muscles shortening to generate positive work and accelerate the body mass. At takeoff, the ankle , wrapping around the bone, releases stored energy akin to a , amplifying force from muscle contractions. The hindlimbs feature specialized , including a long , , and , enabling extension that propels frogs forward or upward. Key movements include flexion of forelimbs, vertical swing and locking of the hind leg, and forward swing, coordinated for efficient . Frogs modulate jump angles via postural adjustments and , achieving trajectories from nearly horizontal to vertical. A unique pelvic bend at the ilio-sacral further enhances launch dynamics in anurans. Jump distances vary by species; the South African sharp-nosed frog (Ptychadena oxyrhynchus) holds the record for farthest relative to body size, leaping approximately 95 times its length in a single bound. American bullfrogs (Lithobates catesbeianus) achieve absolute distances up to 4.2 meters in scientific observations, though contest records claim longer. These capabilities support escape from predators and foraging, with muscle elasticity allowing jumps exceeding ten times body length in some cases.

Walking, Running, and Burrowing

While most anuran prioritize for terrestrial displacement due to elongated hind limbs and powerful extensor muscles, select lineages have evolved walking or running as predominant gaits, often correlating with shorter limbs and enhanced proximal muscle leverage for sustained ground contact. The red-legged running frog (Kassina maculata) exemplifies this, employing asynchronous fore- and hind-limb coordination in walking gaits at low speeds (up to 0.5 body lengths per second) and synchronous movements in running at higher velocities (over 1 body length per second), with ground reaction forces distributed across multiple limbs to maintain stability without reliance on ballistic jumps. This , native to , achieves running speeds via rapid stride frequencies exceeding 10 Hz, supported by elastic energy storage in tendons analogous to mammalian trotters, though limited by lower limb stiffness compared to jumping congeners. Similarly, the banded rubber frog (Phrynomantis bifasciatus), distributed across central and , locomotes primarily by walking on extended slender limbs that elevate the body clear of the substrate, resorting to brief running bursts but avoiding entirely; this posture minimizes drag in leaf litter habitats while enabling precise maneuvering. Comparative muscle dissections reveal that such walkers and runners possess relatively larger hip abductors and shank flexors (e.g., 10-20% greater cross-sectional area in iliofemoralis externus) than jumpers, facilitating prolonged stance phases and lateral stability during motion. These adaptations likely arose convergently in four documented walking-specialist clades—two African (Kassina spp.) and two Neotropical—driven by selective pressures for in cluttered rather than open evasion. Burrowing represents a specialized subterranean locomotion mode in over 400 anuran species, particularly in xeric-adapted families like Scaphiopidae and Myobatrachidae, where individuals excavate tunnels via retrograde propulsion to aestivate during droughts. The process involves alternating unilateral thrusts of the hind feet against particles, with the body inching backward in a peristaltic manner; for instance, spadefoot toads (Scaphiopus spp.) achieve penetration depths up to 1 meter using keratinized metatarsal spades that deflect earth laterally at angles of 30-45 degrees relative to the shank. Head-first burrowers, such as certain Australian myobatrachids, supplement limb action with reinforced cranial , ramming the to compact substrates before limb clearance, attaining rates of 5-10 cm per minute in loamy s. These conserve locomotor energy by leveraging body mass and cohesion, with burrows often lined by shed cocoons to curb evaporative loss, enabling survival for periods exceeding 2 years in species like the green-striped burrowing frog (Cyclorana alboguttata).

Swimming and Climbing

Frogs adapted for aquatic locomotion primarily rely on their hind limbs, featuring fully or partially webbed feet that serve as paddles to maximize propulsive force through increased surface area during the power phase of swimming strokes. These webs generate thrust via drag-based mechanisms, where the extended foot pushes against water resistance, supplemented by acceleration reaction forces from the accelerating limb and body. Semi-aquatic species like Rana esculenta alternate hind leg kicks for sustained swimming or synchronize them for rapid bursts, achieving propulsive efficiencies around 43% in fully aquatic forms. Some frogs incorporate ankle rotation to row with their feet, enhancing thrust beyond simple kicking. Arboreal frogs, such as those in the family , possess enlarged, disc-like toe pads that secrete low-viscosity mucus, facilitating attachment through wet involving and viscous forces rather than true . These pads enable on smooth vertical, overhanging, or curved surfaces by conforming to substrates and generating , with additional support from long, slender legs that allow bridging gaps and precise grips. On rough or curved bark, frogs employ both power and precision grips, combining pad with subarticular tubercles for enhanced traction, permitting efficient navigation through canopies. This specialization contrasts with terrestrial species, underscoring evolutionary divergence in anuran locomotion tied to demands.

Life Cycle and Reproduction

Reproduction

Frogs reproduce sexually, with characteristic of most species in the order Anura. Males attract receptive females through species-specific vocalizations, often emitted in choruses during breeding periods influenced by environmental factors like rising temperatures and rainfall. Mating involves , in which the male grasps the female's torso or pelvic region with his s to align their cloacae, facilitating synchronization of release. This embrace, which can persist for hours or days, ensures that is deposited externally over the eggs as the female expels them into water. variants include axillary (forelimb grip behind the female's forelimbs) and inguinal (grip around the waist) positions, with durations varying by species; for example, some maintain it for months in prolonged breeders. Females deposit eggs in clutches encapsulated by protective jelly coats that provide buoyancy, prevent desiccation, and deter predators. Clutch sizes differ markedly across species: the (Lithobates pipiens) produces about 2,500 eggs per clutch, whereas the (Lithobates catesbeianus) yields up to 20,000. Eggs are typically laid in shallow waters, attached to submerged vegetation or rocks to avoid currents. While predominates, occurs in select lineages, such as the tailed frog (Ascaphus truei), where males transfer via an everted cloacal resembling a , allowing storage in the female's oviducts. Anuran reproductive diversity encompasses , where females mate with multiple males sequentially (e.g., up to 12 in Chiromantis xerampelina), and rare , though most retain with aquatic oviposition.

Egg Development and Tadpoles

Frog eggs, or frogspawn, are deposited in gelatinous masses consisting of thousands of individual eggs, each encased in multiple layers of jelly that provide , osmotic regulation, and protection against predators and pathogens. These clutches are typically submerged in freshwater bodies, where by male sperm ensures across the batch. Development begins immediately post-fertilization, with the formation of a gray crescent on the vegetal side marking the onset of and dorsal-ventral axis within 1 hour. Embryogenesis unfolds in distinct phases: rapid cleavage divisions produce a multicellular blastula by 3.5 hours, followed by around 10-12 hours, where cells invaginate to form germ layers. and then establish the neural tube, heart, and somites, culminating in a functional . Hatching occurs after 3-10 days in many temperate , influenced heavily by temperature; warmer conditions (e.g., 20-25°C) accelerate rates by enhancing metabolic processes, while cooler temperatures extend timelines to weeks. Upon emergence, tadpoles rely on reserves initially before feeding. Tadpoles exhibit a specialized larval morphology adapted for aquatic life, featuring a laterally compressed, streamlined body, a prominent muscular for via undulating movements, and initially that transition to internal ones covered by an operculum. Their rasping, keratinized mouthparts scrape and , supporting a primarily herbivorous diet that fuels rapid growth over 4-12 weeks, depending on and environmental factors. Eyes positioned dorsolaterally aid in predator detection, while a cartilaginous provides axial support before skeletal remodeling in later stages. While most anurans undergo this free-living phase, exceptions exist in direct-developing that hatch as miniatures of adults, bypassing aquatic larvae to adapt to terrestrial habitats. Temperature fluctuations during this phase critically affect survival and development; brief exposures to highs above 30°C can induce and reduce thermal tolerance, whereas optimal ranges promote faster growth without malformations. Tadpole density in clutches influences competition for resources, with higher densities often leading to smaller sizes at due to food limitation. These adaptations underscore the tadpole's role as a distinct ecological entity, distinct from the adult form in and habitat use.

Metamorphosis

Metamorphosis in frogs constitutes the post-embryonic developmental phase transforming the aquatic, herbivorous larva into a semi-terrestrial or terrestrial, carnivorous adult, involving profound morphological, physiological, and behavioral remodeling across nearly all organ systems. This process is hormonally regulated primarily by , particularly thyroxine (T4), produced by the gland, which surges in concentration to trigger changes via thyroid hormone receptors (TRα and TRβ). Exogenous thyroxine administration accelerates metamorphosis, while or TH antagonists inhibit it, confirming TH's essential role. The metamorphic sequence divides into four stages: premetamorphosis, characterized by tadpole growth without limb emergence; prometamorphosis, marked by bud appearance and initial TH elevation; climax, involving rapid elongation, emergence, tail resorption via and , gill degeneration, lung maturation, and reconfiguration from filter-feeding to carnivory; and postmetamorphosis, featuring juvenile frog emergence with residual tail absorption and skin keratinization. During climax, TRβ expression predominates, driving tissue-specific remodeling, such as intestinal shortening and hepatocyte proliferation for urea-based nitrogen suited to terrestrial life. Physiological shifts include transition from and to functional lungs and buccopharyngeal breathing, alongside dietary adaptation via and modifications. Environmental factors modulate timing; elevated water temperatures expedite , yielding smaller adults, whereas cooler conditions prolong larval duration but may impair neural development. Corticosteroids interact with TH to fine-tune progression, enhancing metamorphic competence in certain tissues. Survival through metamorphosis hinges on precise hormonal orchestration, with disruptions—such as endocrine disruptors—potentially causing malformations or arrested development, as evidenced in laboratory assays.

Adult Stage and Parental Care

The adult stage of a frog's life cycle follows the completion of , during which the tadpole undergoes profound physiological restructuring: gills are resorbed, lungs fully develop for aerial respiration, the tail is absorbed to provide nutrients, and limbs elongate for terrestrial mobility, with hindlimbs specialized for jumping in most . The skin transitions to a moist, glandular, semi-permeable layer that facilitates cutaneous and water absorption, though adults must remain near moist environments to prevent . typically occurs 2-4 years post-metamorphosis, varying by , , and resource availability; for instance, in temperate like the (Rana temporaria), adults may reach 13 cm in length and exhibit color variations from green to brown for . Parental care in frogs is phylogenetically diverse and evolutionarily labile, occurring in roughly 10-20% of anuran , often as an to terrestrial breeding sites that reduce aquatic predation but increase risks like or . Unlike most amphibians, where care is absent or minimal, frogs display male-biased behaviors in over 90% of caring , including egg-guarding to deter predators and maintain , foam-nest construction for protection, and active tadpole transport to safer microhabitats. Biparental care, such as egg attendance, is rare but documented in genera like Nyctibatrachus, where both sexes remain at the oviposition site to fan eggs and remove debris, enhancing hatching success by up to 50% in humid tropical environments. Specific examples illustrate this variability: in Darwin's frog (Rhinoderma darwinii), males ingest fertilized eggs into their vocal sac, brooding them for 6-8 weeks until froglets emerge fully formed, a strategy that mitigates predation in leaf-litter habitats of Chile and Argentina. In poison dart frogs of the family Dendrobatidae, such as the mimic poison frog (Ranitomeya imitator), parents—often males—transport tadpoles on their backs to phytotelmata (water-filled tree holes or bromeliads), where females may provision unfertilized eggs as food, enabling survival in nutrient-poor sites; this intensive care correlates with small clutch sizes (1-5 eggs) and evolved under resource scarcity in Amazonian forests. The Australian hip-pocket frog (Assa darlingtoni) exemplifies extreme male investment, with fertilized eggs developing externally before juveniles crawl into a specialized skin pouch on the male's hip flanks for protection during the initial terrestrial phase, reducing mortality from invertebrates and drying. These behaviors, while enhancing offspring fitness, impose energetic costs on parents, such as reduced foraging, and are more prevalent in species with direct development or arboreal habits, reflecting causal trade-offs between fecundity and investment.

Behavior and Ecology

Defense Mechanisms

Frogs utilize diverse defense mechanisms to evade predation, encompassing chemical secretions, cryptic coloration, behavioral responses, and structural adaptations. These strategies vary by species and habitat, reflecting evolutionary pressures from predators such as birds, snakes, and mammals. Chemical defenses predominate in many anuran , where granular skin glands produce or sequester toxins that render the frog unpalatable or lethal to predators. Alkaloids, such as those in dendrobatid poison frogs, are often obtained from dietary sources like mites and , accumulating in higher concentrations with age and body size due to increased capacity. These secretions can cause , , or gastrointestinal distress upon ingestion, with effectiveness demonstrated in laboratory tests where predators reject toxic individuals after tasting. In aposematic species, vivid coloration signals toxicity, enhancing predator learning and avoidance through associative conditioning. Morphological camouflage allows many frogs to blend seamlessly with substrates like leaf litter or bark, reducing detection by visually hunting predators. Species such as the hip-pocket frog (Assa darlingtoni) exhibit mottled patterns that mimic decaying vegetation, with immobility further enhancing during daylight hours. Some frogs physiologically adjust pigmentation for background matching, though this is limited compared to and primarily aids alongside concealment. Behavioral tactics include rapid locomotion tailored to threat type; for instance, túngara frogs (Engystomops pustulosus) execute aerial escapes against bats but ground-directed leaps when attacked by snakes, optimizing based on predator sensory cues. Deimatic displays, such as the exposure of eyespots in Pleurodema brachyops, startle predators momentarily, providing escape opportunities. Tonic immobility, or feigned death, is employed by certain species to deter further attack once seized, exploiting predator tendencies to abandon unresponsive prey. Certain frogs possess physical weaponry, including to appear larger and hinder swallowing, as seen in bufonids. In astylosternid and hyperoliid frogs from , specialized skeletal elements allow skin puncture to form protrusible spines or claws upon threat, inflicting wounds on attackers. Sticky mucus secretions from parotoid glands can also gum predators' mouths, as observed in some hylids where increases post-stimulation. These mechanisms often combine; for example, toxic paired with evasion behaviors maximizes survival across life stages.

Communication and Calls

Anurans primarily communicate through acoustic signals, with vocalizations serving key roles in reproduction, territorial defense, and social interactions. Males typically produce species-specific advertisement calls to attract females and signal readiness to mate, conveying information on species identity, individual quality, location, and competitive status. These calls are generated by forcing air from the lungs across the vocal cords in the larynx while the mouth remains closed, with nostrils shut to maintain pressure; the resulting vibrations create sound waves that are amplified and resonated by the vocal sac, an elastic throat pouch inflated during calling. Call repertoires vary by species and context, including advertisement calls for , aggressive calls to deter rivals, release calls by grasped individuals to signal non- sex or status, and defensive or feeding calls in some taxa. Advertisement calls often feature stereotyped temporal and spectral properties, such as pulse rates and dominant frequencies, that enable discrimination and reduce hybridization risks; for instance, interspecific differences in call duration and frequency reflect phylogenetic divergence. While males dominate calling, females in certain species emit or distress vocalizations differing in acoustic structure and timing from male calls, challenging traditional views of anuran communication as male-centric. Vocal sac morphology diversifies across anurans, enhancing multimodal signaling by altering call projection, visual displays, or even chemical cues via skin secretions, with evolutionary pressures shaping sacs for both acoustic amplification and mate assessment. Some produce nonlinear vocal phenomena, like chaos or biphonation, adding complexity to signals that may indicate or body condition. Acoustic influences call timing and structure, with males adjusting chorusing to minimize overlap and maximize transmission in noisy environments.

Diet, Predation, and Ecological Role

Adult frogs are predominantly carnivorous, capturing prey such as (including flies, moths, locusts, and spiders), snails, slugs, and worms using their extensible, sticky tongues. Larger species may consume small vertebrates like other amphibians or . Tadpoles, in contrast, are primarily herbivorous or detritivorous, grazing on , aquatic , and organic debris scraped from surfaces, though some exhibit omnivory or under resource scarcity. Frogs face predation from a diverse array of vertebrates, including birds (such as ), reptiles (snakes and ), , mammals (raccoons and water shrews), and occasionally other . Predation rates vary by and life stage; for instance, tadpoles in -inhabited waters experience higher mortality, influencing population dynamics and prompting evolutionary adaptations like faster to reduce exposure. In ecosystems, frogs serve as key regulators of invertebrate populations, with individual adults consuming over 100 , including pests like mosquitoes and agricultural threats, thereby aiding natural . Their permeable and dual aquatic-terrestrial life cycle make them sensitive bioindicators of , signaling or degradation through declines before effects manifest in less . As both predators and prey, frogs facilitate nutrient cycling and maintain balance, with their abundance correlating to health and stability.

Distribution and Habitat

Global Distribution

Frogs of the order Anura are distributed on every continent except , inhabiting a wide range of environments from tropical rainforests to temperate forests and arid regions, though absent from extreme polar areas, certain oceanic islands, and some deserts. As of mid-2025, approximately 7,828 of anurans have been described, representing the majority of the over 8,800 known species worldwide. Species richness is highest in tropical regions, particularly the Neotropics, where countries like Brazil (833 species), Colombia (747 species), and Ecuador (484 species) host the greatest numbers. Southeast Asia and parts of Africa also exhibit high diversity, with Melanesia alone containing over 7% of global frog species despite comprising less than 0.7% of the world's land area. In contrast, higher latitudes and isolated islands support fewer species, reflecting patterns shaped by historical biogeography, climate, and habitat availability rather than uniform dispersal. Human-mediated introductions have expanded ranges for some species, such as the (Rhinella marina) in and parts of , originally from , altering local distributions beyond native patterns. Native distributions remain centered in the historically, with diversification linked to Gondwanan origins, though ongoing discoveries continue to refine global maps.

Habitat Preferences

Frogs display a broad spectrum of habitat preferences, encompassing terrestrial, aquatic, arboreal, , semi-aquatic, and torrent-dwelling ecotypes, adapted to environments from tropical rainforests to deserts and high-altitude mountaintops. These preferences are driven by physiological imperatives, particularly the need for moisture to prevent through permeable skin, with many selecting microhabitats offering high relative , cooler temperatures, and structural cover like leaf litter or . Aquatic and semi-aquatic species, such as those in permanent or slow-moving , favor habitats with stable water availability for egg deposition and development, often in areas with emergent providing shelter and perches for calling males. Terrestrial frogs, including many temperate dwellers, prefer proximity to ephemeral pools or ditches for breeding while in adjacent grasslands or forests, where grass, herbaceous cover, and leaf litter support prey abundance and . Arboreal forms exploit vertical strata in humid forests, utilizing canopies, bromeliads, or vines for refuge and , with adaptations like toe pads enabling access to elevated, shaded microsites that retain moisture. Fossorial species burrow into soil or leaf litter in arid or seasonal habitats, emerging during wet periods for breeding in temporary pools, thereby minimizing exposure to desiccating conditions. Torrent-dwellers inhabit fast-flowing in montane regions, selecting substrates and riffles that offer oxygenation for eggs but demand morphological specializations like enlarged suckers for against currents. Across ecotypes, habitat choice correlates with traits such as reduced eye size in or fully aquatic forms, reflecting trade-offs in sensory investment for burrowing or submerged lifestyles over in open terrains. Breeding sites universally demand unpolluted, warm waters—often in sun-exposed shallows amid thin-stemmed plants—to optimize larval survival, underscoring frogs' sensitivity to hydrological stability and vegetation structure.

Conservation and Threats

Major Threats

Frogs and other amphibians have experienced widespread population declines since the , with approximately 41% of assessed species classified as threatened with extinction according to the . Habitat loss and degradation represent the primary threat, impacting 93% of threatened amphibian species through activities such as , , and that fragment breeding sites and aquatic habitats essential for and survival. The chytrid fungus , responsible for the disease , has caused severe declines or extinctions in over 200 frog species since its emergence in the late , infecting more than 350 amphibian species by disrupting skin function critical for and respiration. Mass die-offs have been documented across continents, with the fungus thriving in altered environments and spreading via in amphibians. Climate change has risen as a significant driver, contributing to 39% of documented declines since 2004 through mechanisms including prolonged droughts, altered patterns, and rising temperatures that desiccate habitats and disrupt breeding cycles. Projections indicate potential habitat losses of up to 33% for frogs and toads by 2100 due to intensified dryness, exacerbating vulnerability in pond-breeding species. Pollution from pesticides and other contaminants further compounds risks, with mixtures causing endocrine disruption, developmental malformations, and reduced survival rates in larvae and adults due to their permeable skin and biphasic life cycles. Studies link exposure during terrestrial migrations to population crashes, particularly in agricultural landscapes. for food, pets, and , alongside predation, adds pressure, though these are secondary to and factors in most cases.

Debates on Decline Attribution

Global amphibian population declines, documented since the 1980s, have prompted debates over primary causal attribution, with infectious diseases, , chemical pollutants, and proposed as key drivers, often interacting synergistically rather than in isolation. The chytrid fungus (Bd), identified in 1998 as the agent of , is empirically linked to mass mortality events and declines in over 500 species, including 90 extinctions, particularly in pristine habitats where other anthropogenic pressures are minimal. Experimental inoculations and field necropsies confirm Bd as a proximate cause of death in regions like Australian rainforests and , where infected amphibians exhibit disrupted skin electrolyte balance leading to . Attribution to habitat loss and degradation remains prominent for certain taxa, such as in the Palaearctic where it leads Bd as a threat, but fails to account for enigmatic declines in protected montane unaffected by direct conversion. Chemical pollutants, including pesticides like , have been hypothesized to induce or developmental abnormalities, increasing Bd susceptibility; however, field evidence for widespread causal roles is weaker than laboratory demonstrations, with critics noting confounding variables like natural stressors. and , such as bullfrogs, contribute regionally, exacerbating declines through direct predation or Bd vectoring, but global patterns point to Bd's novelty—likely originating from Asian trade—as a panzootic driver overriding local factors. Climate change's role is contested, with some analyses attributing it as primary for 39% of declines via altered hydroperiods, droughts, and temperature shifts favoring Bd transmission optima around 17–25°C. Yet, correlative models linking warming to outbreaks overlook Bd's human-mediated global spread since the mid-20th century, predating rapid climate shifts, and empirical recoveries in some populations post-Bd epizootics without climate reversal challenge unidirectional . Proponents of synergistic effects argue environmental warming reduces immunity, but first-principles scrutiny reveals Bd's enzootic persistence in tolerant species and absence in pre-1970s records as evidence of introduction over endogenous climate forcing. Multi-stressor frameworks, integrating UV and acidification, better explain variability but underscore Bd's outsized impact in chains.

Conservation Efforts and Outcomes

Conservation efforts for frogs encompass habitat restoration, , disease mitigation, and reintroduction programs coordinated by organizations such as the IUCN Species Survival Commission Specialist Group. The Amphibian Conservation Action Plan outlines strategies including protected areas establishment and ex-situ propagation to address the 41% of species assessed as threatened. Habitat-focused initiatives have demonstrated measurable successes; for instance, the creation of over 1,000 ponds in Switzerland's canton between 2005 and 2015 resulted in a significant increase in populations, including the European tree frog ( arborea), with calling male densities rising from near absence to over 100 per kilometer in some areas despite ongoing chytrid fungus presence. Similarly, restoration for the (Lithobates pipiens) in the U.S. involves removal and water level management to reduce and disease transmission, leading to improved in treated sites. Disease mitigation targets chytridiomycosis caused by (Bd), employing antifungal treatments like baths and heat therapy to clear infections prior to release. Reintroduction of Bd-resistant lineages, as in the Sierra Nevada yellow-legged frog (Rana sierrae), has facilitated population recovery at landscape scales by establishing disease-tolerant breeding groups. programs, such as those for the (Atelopus zeteki), have preserved genetic diversity in zoos since wild extirpation in 2007, enabling potential future releases. Outcomes remain mixed, with targeted interventions yielding recoveries in select populations but failing to reverse global trends; amphibian status continues deteriorating, particularly for salamanders and Neotropical species, per the updated IUCN Red List Index. Translocation efforts often underperform due to low post-release survival, highlighting needs for site-specific adaptations like pond over stream habitats for species such as the Chiricahua leopard frog (Lithobates chiricahuensis). While habitat augmentation bends decline curves locally, pervasive threats necessitate scaled-up actions to achieve broader stabilization.

Interactions with Humans

Culinary and Traditional Uses

Frog legs, primarily the hind limbs, have been consumed as food across multiple cultures for millennia, with archaeological evidence indicating their use by ancient Britons around 10,000 years ago based on bone fragments from sites. In , consumption dates to , where a legend attributes the practice to monks who classified frog legs as to circumvent Lenten restrictions, leading to their status as a especially in eastern regions and prepared similarly to wings through frying or sautéing. are also integral to cuisines in southeastern Asian countries including , , , and , often stir-fried or grilled, as well as in Chinese dishes and northern Italian rural festivals known as sagre dedicated to frog-based meals. In the United States, particularly where Rayne is dubbed the "Frog Capital of the World," frog legs feature in Southern cooking, historically alongside . Global harvest for food reaches approximately one billion frogs annually, predominantly wild-caught from (, ), (over 36 million exported yearly), and supplied to major importers like the , where alone imported 30,015 tonnes of fresh, refrigerated, or frozen frog legs from 2010 to 2019. Beyond cuisine, frogs have featured in traditional medicinal practices, often involving their skin secretions or live application. In Amazonian indigenous rituals, secretions from the giant monkey frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) are applied via burns in a practice called kambo, intended for purification and , though it induces effects like , , and , with documented health risks. Mexican employs secretions from the canyon treefrog (Dryophytes arenicolor) as a remedy against infections, drawing on historical beliefs in their properties now under scientific scrutiny for potential. In 19th- and 20th-century , folk cures for toothaches included placing a live frog in the mouth, alongside other unconventional remedies like sucking cloves or using water, reflecting empirical trial-and-error approaches in rural traditions. Such uses persist in some regions, as evidenced by reports of individuals consuming live frogs for relief tied to local beliefs in their curative powers.

Scientific Research and Medicine

Frogs, particularly species of the genus Xenopus such as and , serve as key model organisms in due to their large, externally fertilized eggs that allow straightforward manipulation and observation of embryonic stages. These features enable researchers to study vertebrate , cell differentiation, and genetic mechanisms with high resolution, as the embryos are transparent and develop rapidly. Xenopus models have contributed to foundational insights in formation, regeneration, and development, with larvae retaining regenerative capacities lost post-metamorphosis. In broader biomedical research, frogs have facilitated Nobel Prize-winning advances, including early work on stem cells and techniques, as their embryos support experiments. Historically, from to the , female laevis were used in (hCG)-based pregnancy tests; injection of a woman's urine into the frog's hind leg induced within 5-12 hours if pregnant, providing a reliable, non-invasive diagnostic method before immunological assays became standard. This practice inadvertently spread chytrid fungus via exported frogs, contributing to amphibian declines. Medicinally, frog skin secretions yield bioactive peptides with therapeutic potential; antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) from species like those in the Phyllomedusa genus exhibit broad-spectrum activity against bacteria, including drug-resistant strains, by disrupting microbial membranes without harming host cells. For instance, synthetic peptides derived from frog skin have shown efficacy against Gram-negative pathogens while sparing beneficial microbiota. In pain management, epibatidine, isolated from the Ecuadorian poison dart frog Epipedobates anthonyi in 1992, acts as a potent non-opioid analgesic by targeting nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, offering morphine-like relief in animal models without addiction or respiratory depression risks. Additional compounds from frog toxins are under investigation for anticancer and immunoregulatory effects, such as Bowman-Birk-like protease inhibitors targeting tumor cells. Recent developments include frog-derived antibiotics that evade bacterial resistance mechanisms, as reported in 2025 studies from the University of Pennsylvania.

Pest Control and Agricultural Benefits

Frogs function as predators of insect pests in agricultural ecosystems, consuming species that damage crops such as rice, thereby reducing the need for chemical interventions. In rice paddies of lowland Nepal, surveys identified 13 frog species whose diets included a high proportion of crop pests, with consumption peaking during the rainy season when pest populations are highest. Integrated rice-frog co-culture systems, practiced in parts of Asia, leverage this predation to suppress pests like planthoppers and leafhoppers, allowing farmers to cut pesticide applications by up to 50% in experimental fields while maintaining or boosting rice yields. Frog excreta further enhances soil fertility by recycling nitrogen and phosphorus, improving nutrient availability for crops. Empirical assessments quantify these benefits in specific contexts. Native frog species in rice fields preferentially target pest insects over non-pest prey, unlike invasive amphibians such as cane toads, which consume fewer agricultural threats. In Brazilian agriculture, frogs provide natural control of native crop pests valued at approximately 23.6 billion U.S. dollars annually, based on models estimating avoided losses from insect damage. Organic rice fields support higher frog diversity, correlating with enhanced pest suppression compared to conventional systems reliant on pesticides. While some field studies indicate variable efficacy depending on frog and complexity, the predatory of frogs contributes to sustainable pest management by targeting herbivorous at larval and stages, potentially stabilizing multi-trophic food webs in agroecosystems. This biological control aligns with practices minimizing synthetic inputs, as evidenced by increased beneficial in frog-inhabited paddies.

Cultural and Symbolic Significance

In ancient , frogs symbolized fertility, life, and renewal, as their prolific reproduction coincided with the annual flooding that enriched the soil for . The goddess , depicted with a frog head or as a frog, presided over and creation, embodying the transformative life cycle from to adult. This association stemmed from observable biological abundance, with millions of frogs emerging post-flood, representing and the inundation's life-giving floods. Across Mesoamerican cultures, frogs served as rain spirits and emblems, linked to agricultural cycles through their calls heralding wet seasons and mirroring crop renewal. In Native American traditions, particularly among tribes like the , frogs denoted abundance, wealth, and seasonal guardianship, with myths featuring giant frogs controlling water or rains essential for survival; small frog effigies or coins were used as prosperity talismans. They also symbolized cleansing and adaptability, reflecting ecological roles in purification via predation on . In East Asian folklore, frogs connoted good fortune and prosperity; the Japanese term kaeru (frog) phonetically evokes kaeru (to return), symbolizing wealth's return, often depicted in art as guardians of homes against misfortune. Chinese lore features the three-legged money toad, a frog-like entity spitting coins, rooted in alchemical and lunar associations with abundance, though distinct from wild frogs' observed behaviors. Hindu traditions view frogs as emblems of and transformation, paralleling the tadpole-to-frog stages with soul transmigration, as noted in Vedic texts where the frog represents primordial matter. European folklore often portrayed frogs ambivalently: ancient and Romans linked them to and licentiousness due to breeding choruses, while medieval tales associated them with or ill omens, distinguishing benign frogs from warted toads as familiars. This duality arose from empirical observations of nocturnal habits and skin secretions, contrasted with positive motifs in agrarian societies. Globally, the frog's metamorphic life cycle underpins widespread symbolism of rebirth and transition, empirically tied to rather than abstract ideals.

References

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