Linggo, Pebrero 10, 2013


Life Cycle of a Frog
By: Maria Francia C. Flojo
    Partido State University
Goa, Camarines Sur
College of Education
A/Y 2012-2013
mariafrancia_flojo@yahoo.com
franciaflojo.blogspot.com






"The lifelong process of care giving is the ultimate link between caregivers of all ages. You and I are not just in a phase we will outgrow. This is life--birth, death, and everything in between.... The care continuum is the cycle of life turning full circle in each of our lives. And what we learn when we spoon-feed our babies will echo in our ears as we feed our parents. The point is not to be done. The point is to be ready to do again."



What is a Frog?

Frogs are a diverse and largely carnivorous group of short-bodied, tailless amphibians composing the order Anura (Ancient Greek an-, without + oura, tail).Frogs are widely distributed, ranging from the tropics to subarctic regions, but the greatest concentration of species diversity is found in tropical rainforests. There are approximately 4,800 recorded species, making them among the most diverse vertebrate groups.

Frogs typically lay their eggs in water. The eggs hatch into aquatic larvae, called tadpoles that have tails and internal gills. They have highly specialized rasping mouth parts suitable for herbivorous, omnivorous or planktivorous diets.

Jumping

Frogs are generally recognized as exceptional jumpers and, relative to their size, the best jumpers of all vertebrates.The Australian rocket frog, Litoria nasuta can leap over 2 meters (6 ft 7 in), a distance that is more than fifty times its body length of 5.5 centimeters (2.2 in).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.

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.

Life Cycle of a Frog

Life History

Like other amphibians, the life cycle of a frog normally starts in water with an egg that hatches into a limbless larva with gills, commonly known as a tadpole. After further growth, during which it develops limbs and lungs, the tadpole undergoes metamorphosis in which its appearance and internal organs are rearranged. After this it is able to leave the water as a miniature, air-breathing frog.

·         Eggs-The female frog lays clusters of eggs in or near the water.

·         Tadpole-Tiny tadpoles hatch from the eggs. Tadpoles swim in fresh water and breathe with gills.

·         Growing Tadpole-As a tadpole grows, it develops legs.

·         Froglet-The tadpole becomes a froglet; it has 4 legs, breathes with lungs, and loses its tail.

·         Adult-The adult frog lives on land, breathes with lungs, has 4 legs, and has no tail.


 




·         Mom and Dad Frog Decide to Have Baby Frogs


The life cycle of a frog starts when mom and dad frog fall in love and decide to have baby frogs. Okay, nobody really knows if frogs fall in love, but it’s okay to think that they do. Mom and dad frog will mate, either in the water or in a tree, depending on what kind of frogs they are. You know this is happening when you see dad frog hugging mom frog from behind her. The dad frog will lay on top of mom frog and wrap his front legs around her body and he will hug her for several days. This hug is called amplexus.


·         Spawning


While mom and dad frog are hugging, mom frog will lay a bunch of eggs for the dad frog to fertilize. Unlike human eggs, frog eggs are fertilized by dad frog when they are outside of the mom frog’s body. This is called spawning and is the very beginning of the frog life cycle. After the mom and dad frog have finished spawning, dad frog leaves, and sometimes the mom frog does, too. Sometimes mom frog will stick around, though, and wait for the baby frogs to hatch so that she can care for them, but this only happens with some breeds of frogs, not all of them. 


·         The Frog Eggs

Mom frog will lay a whole bunch of eggs because most of them won’t hatch. Some of the eggs will be eaten by other small animals and birds, and some of them won’t become fertilized. Other eggs might become dried up in the sun or get broken in the water. The eggs that survive will hatch after about 7 to 9 days and begin the frog cycle and start the many life stages of a frog. But they don’t get to be frogs just yet; they have to go through the tadpoles’ life cycle first. 



·         The Tadpole


When frog eggs hatch they don’t come out as frogs right away, they have to start out as tiny little fish-like creatures called tadpoles. In the beginning 7 days or so of tadpole development, a tadpole will eat the egg yolk that is still left in its gut. The only parts to the baby tadpole are the gills, the tail, and the mouth. After about 7 days of tadpole development, the tadpole will begin to swim around on its own and eat algae from the top of the water.

 

 

·         Tadpole Development


About four weeks into the tadpoles life cycle it will begin to grow teeth and skin over the gills and will begin to become social and swim in schools like fish. Then 6 to 9 weeks into the tadpoles development it will begin to grow longer and develop a little bit of a head and some legs. At the end of the 9 weeks, the tadpole will look more like a frog than a fish, but with a long tail. The tadpole will also start to eat things like tiny insects.

In areas of the world that have cold winter months or that are in very high altitudes, which also are sometimes very cold places, the tadpoles life cycle takes all winter long to complete.  


 

·         Frog Metamorphosis


From 9 to about 12 weeks, the frog metamorphosis starts to really take shape. The tadpole that looks like an itty bitty frog but with a long tail (called a Froglet) will lose most of its tail, grow a frog tongue, and start to really look like a baby frog. The whole frog life cycle model is completed after about 16 weeks when the frog becomes an adult.  

 

What’s the Difference in a toad and frog life cycle?

Actually, toads are frogs. Toads are just called something different because they look a little different, but they are all part of the frog family. Lots of people want to know what the difference is between a toad life cycle and a frog life cycle. Mostly it’s the way that the eggs are laid and the way that the skin develops. The frog eggs are laid in clumps and toad eggs are laid out in strands or lines. The skin of a frog will develop into slimy skin and the skin of a toad will develop into warty skin, which is why people think that toads can give you warts. But if toads can give you warts, why don’t frogs make you slimy?  

Grow a Frog

So, if you were going to grow a frog, where would you start? Would you start with a tadpole or with an egg? I bet you said egg. But remember that most of the eggs won’t live, so how do you know that you have a living egg? Maybe starting with a tadpole would give you better luck when you are trying to grow a frog. Or, maybe you should start with a mom and a dad frog. But then you might grow a hundred frogs and they would take over your whole room and turn your walls green and sing you to sleep every night croaking… Okay, that’s another story! Start with a tadpole and you will be able to watch the whole, very cool, frog metamorphosis. 


References:

http://www.frog-life-cycle.com/

http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/amphibians/books/froglifecycle/

http://allaboutfrogs.org/weird/general/cycle.html    

                                   



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