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  2. Frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog

    Frogs have no tail, except as larvae, and most have long hind legs, elongated ankle bones, webbed toes, no claws, large eyes, and a smooth or warty skin. They have short vertebral columns, with no more than 10 free vertebrae and fused tailbones (urostyle or coccyx). [ 47 ]

  3. Bladder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bladder

    The amphibian bladder is usually highly distensible; among some land-dwelling species of frogs and salamanders, it may account for 20%–50% of total body weight. [44] Urine flows from the kidneys through the ureters into the bladder and is periodically released from the bladder to the cloaca. [45]

  4. Amphibian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphibian

    Adult frogs do not have tails and caecilians have only very short ones. [69] Didactic model of an amphibian heart. Salamanders use their tails in defence and some are prepared to jettison them to save their lives in a process known as autotomy. Certain species in the Plethodontidae have a weak zone at the base of the tail and use this strategy ...

  5. Mesonephros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesonephros

    The mesonephros persists and forms the anterior portion of the permanent kidneys in fish and amphibians, but in reptiles, birds, and mammals, it atrophies and for the most part disappears rapidly as the permanent kidney (metanephros) begins to develop [2] during the sixth or seventh week. By the beginning of the fifth month of human development ...

  6. Kidney (vertebrates) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kidney_(vertebrates)

    The kidneys of snakes are elongated, cylindrical [53] [50] and lobulated. [52] Turtles and some lizards have urinary bladder [50] that opens into the cloaca [54] but snakes and crocodiles do not have it. [50] Compared with the metanephros of birds and mammals, the metanephros of reptiles is simpler in structure. [21]

  7. Osmoregulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmoregulation

    secretion – the remaining fluid becomes urine, which travels down collecting ducts to the medullary region of the kidney. excretion – the urine (in mammals) is stored in the urinary bladder and exits via the urethra; in other vertebrates, the urine mixes with other wastes in the cloaca before leaving the body (frogs also have a urinary ...

  8. Ranoidea platycephala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranoidea_platycephala

    Ranoidea platycephala, is a species of frog that is common in most Australian states and territories and is commonly referred to as the water-holding frog but has also been referred to as the eastern water-holding frog, and the common water holding frog. [2]

  9. Common frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_frog

    Male Rana temporaria calling in a garden pond in Jambes, Belgium. The common frog or grass frog (Rana temporaria), also known as the European common frog, European common brown frog, European grass frog, European Holarctic true frog, European pond frog or European brown frog, is a semi-aquatic amphibian of the family Ranidae, found throughout much of Europe as far north as Scandinavia and as ...