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  2. Frog hearing and communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog_hearing_and_communication

    A frog which demonstrates vocalizations in male-male competition is the Lithobates clamitans aka the Green Frog. Typically, they have four types of calls each warning a different level of urgency and each being distinct. The first two calls are types of advertisement calls to establish dominance among the challengers.

  3. Pain in amphibians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain_in_amphibians

    Dissection of a frog. Pain is an aversive sensation and feeling associated with actual, or potential, tissue damage. [1] It is widely accepted by a broad spectrum of scientists and philosophers that non-human animals can perceive pain, including pain in amphibians.

  4. Human–animal communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human–animal_communication

    Herman's later publications do not discuss the whistle communication. Herman started getting US Navy funding in 1985, [36] so further expansion of the two-way whistle language would have been in the classified United States Navy Marine Mammal Program, a black project. Herman also studied the crossmodal perceptual ability of dolphins.

  5. Animal language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_language

    Discreteness: Language is composed of small, separate, and repeatable parts (discrete units, e.g. morphemes) that are used in combination to create meaning. Displacement: Language can be used to communicate about things that are not in the immediate vicinity either spatially or temporally. [6]

  6. Animal communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_communication

    Striking body parts together can also produce auditory signals. A well-known example of this is the tail tip vibration of rattlesnakes as a warning signal. Other examples include bill clacking in birds, wing clapping in manakin courtship displays, and chest beating in gorillas. [40]

  7. The Frog That Freezes Itself for Winter - AOL

    www.aol.com/frog-freezes-itself-winter-093200710...

    Up to two-thirds of the frog’s body can be frozen but it will still survive. With the arrival of the spring thaw, water re-enters the frog’s cells and their heart starts beating again. It ...

  8. Tympanum (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tympanum_(anatomy)

    A frog's ear drum works in very much the same way as does a human eardrum. It is a membrane that is stretched across a ring of cartilage like a snare drum that vibrates. Crossing the middle ear chamber there is an ossicle called the columella that is connected to the tympanum, and another ossicle, the operculum, that connects this to the oval ...

  9. Researchers found a tiny skull with wide eyes and a ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/newly-identified-fossil-named...

    A June 2021 study found that some species of frogs have lost and again evolved teeth several ... The skull of Kermitops is of similar size to the skull of another well-known Early Permian ...