enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rheobatrachus silus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheobatrachus_silus

    The southern gastric-brooding frog was discovered in 1972 and described in 1973, [2] though there is one publication suggesting that the species was discovered in 1914 (from the Blackall Range). [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Rheobatrachus silus was restricted to the Blackall Range and Conondale Ranges in southeast Queensland , north of Brisbane , between ...

  3. Indobatrachus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indobatrachus

    Indobatrachus (Greek for "Indian frog") is an extinct genus of frog known from the Early Paleocene of India. [1] [2] It contains a single species, Indobatrachus pusillus.Two other species, I. trivialis and I. malabaricus, were also previously described, but these have since been synonymized with I. pusillus.

  4. Gastric-brooding frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastric-brooding_frog

    These scientists from the University of Newcastle Australia led by Prof Michael Mahony, who was the scientist who first discovered the northern gastric-brooding frog, Simon Clulow and Prof Mike Archer from the University of New South Wales hope to continue using somatic-cell nuclear transfer methods to produce an embryo that can survive to the ...

  5. Palaeobatrachus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeobatrachus

    Palaeobatrachus was the first fossil frog to be described, [1] with the first species being P. diluvianus named by Goldfuss in 1831, originally as Rana diluviana from remains found in uppermost Oligocene strata near Bonn in Germany. It was later recognised as distinct and placed in the new separate genus Palaeobatrachus by Tschudi in 1839. [3]

  6. Beelzebufo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beelzebufo

    Beelzebufo (/ b iː ˌ ɛ l z ɪ ˈ b juː f oʊ / or / ˌ b iː l z ə ˈ b juː f oʊ /) is an extinct genus of hyloid frog from the Late Cretaceous Berivotra and Maevarano Formations of Madagascar. [1] The type species is B. ampinga, and common names assigned by the popular media to B. ampinga include devil frog, [2] devil toad, [3] and the ...

  7. Murgon fossil site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murgon_fossil_site

    The most common fossil at the site are of crocodiles and giant trionychidae turtles which have become extinct in Australia. [4] Fossils from Murgon include the world's oldest songbirds, the oldest Australian marsupials, and the only fossils of leiopelmatid frogs outside of the Saint Bathans Fauna.

  8. Taudactylus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taudactylus

    In 1992 an experimental translocation experiment was being conducted to determine the cause of population declines in T. acutirostris.Frogs and tadpoles from a stream in the north of the species range were collected and placed into observation enclosures at five sites to the south where the species had disappeared and in a control enclosure at the collection site.

  9. Triadobatrachus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triadobatrachus

    Triadobatrachus is an extinct genus of salientian frog-like amphibians, including only one known species, Triadobatrachus massinoti. It is the oldest member of the frog lineage known, and an excellent example of a transitional fossil. It lived during the Early Triassic about 250 million years ago, in what is now Madagascar.