enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. African clawed frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_clawed_frog

    Clawed frogs have powerful legs that help them move quickly both underwater and on land. Feral clawed frogs in South Wales have been found to travel up to 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) between locations. [11] The feet of Xenopus species have three black claws on the last three digits. These claws are used to rip apart food and scratch predators.

  3. Hairy frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairy_Frog

    The hairy frog is also notable in possessing retractable "claws", which it may project through the skin, apparently by intentionally breaking the bones of the toe. [5] These are not true claws, as they are made of bone, not keratin. In addition, there is a small bony nodule nestled in the tissue just beyond the frog's fingertip.

  4. List of amphibians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_amphibians

    The list below largely follows Darrel Frost's Amphibian Species of the World (ASW), Version 5.5 (31 January 2011). Another classification, which largely follows Frost, but deviates from it in part is the one of AmphibiaWeb , which is run by the California Academy of Sciences and several of universities.

  5. African dwarf frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_dwarf_frog

    These frogs have tiny black claws on their hind legs, which caused one of their discoverers, Oskar Boettger, to originally call them African dwarf clawed frogs, [5] but they quickly lose these black tips in the sharp pebble environments and are more commonly called African dwarf frogs today. African Dwarf Frogs can swim up to 4 miles per hour ...

  6. Amphibamus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphibamus

    Amphibamus is a genus of amphibamid temnospondyl amphibians from the Carboniferous (middle Pennsylvanian) of North America. [1] [2] [3] This animal is considered to have been close to the ancestry of modern amphibians. Its length was about 20 centimetres (7.9 in). [4]

  7. Claw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claw

    The only amphibians to bear claws are the African clawed frogs. Claws evolved separately in the amphibian and amniote (reptiliomorph) line. [12] However, the hairy frog has claw analogues on its feet; the frog intentionally dislocates the tips of its fingers to unsheathe the sharp points of its last phalanges.

  8. Amphibian Species of the World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphibian_Species_of_the_World

    The first version of the catalogue was published as a book in 1985, and well received by specialists in the field. [1] [2] In 1989, the ASC gave the copyright for Amphibian Species of the World to the Herpetologists' League, and they added more amphibians to the database. The League and American Museum of Natural History put Darrel Frost in ...

  9. Xenopus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenopus

    Xenopus (/ ˈ z ɛ n ə p ə s / [1] [2]) (Gk., ξενος, xenos = strange, πους, pous = foot, commonly known as the clawed frog) is a genus of highly aquatic frogs native to sub-Saharan Africa. Twenty species are currently described within it.