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  2. Circulatory system of the horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circulatory_system_of_the...

    Although blood pressure may vary greatly between animals, the average blood pressure for a standing horse is 120/70 mmHg. An indirect measurement of blood pressure may be taken with a cuff placed around the middle coccygeal artery at the base of the tail, or above the digital artery. It is usually taken to monitor circulation during surgery. [5]

  3. Richard Hill Norris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Hill_Norris

    Blood corpuscles of a frog Diagrams of blood corpuscles based on early microphotography. Richard Hill Norris FRSE FRSGS (1830–1916) was a British physiologist, spiritualist and photographer. [1] From the 1880s he began microscopic photography of blood corpuscles and was a pioneer of micrography. In 1856 he invented the dry collodion ...

  4. Lymph heart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lymph_heart

    As lymph is a filtrate of blood, it closely resembles the plasma in its water content. Lymph also contains a small amount of metabolic waste and a much smaller amount of protein than that of blood. Lymph vessels carry the lymph and, in the frog, open into the four lymph hearts. These lymph hearts are located on the dorsal side of frog's body.

  5. Blood vessel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_vessel

    Blood vessels function to transport blood to an animal's body tissues. In general, arteries and arterioles transport oxygenated blood from the lungs to the body and its organs, and veins and venules transport deoxygenated blood from the body to the lungs. Blood vessels also circulate blood throughout the circulatory system.

  6. Frog (horse anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog_(horse_anatomy)

    The frog also acts like a pump to move the blood back to the heart, a great distance from the relatively thin leg to the main organ of the circulatory system. [citation needed] In the stabled horse, the frog does not wear but degrades, due to bacterial and fungal activity, to an irregular, soft, slashed surface.

  7. Frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog

    These contain blood vessels and are thought to increase the area of the skin available for respiration. [65] Pouched frog (Assa darlingtoni) camouflaged against leaf litter Wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus) uses disruptive coloration. Some species have bony plates embedded in the skin, a trait that appears to have evolved independently several ...

  8. Haemal arch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemal_arch

    Blood vessels to and from the tail run through the arch. In reptiles, the caudofemoralis longus muscle, one of the main muscles involved in locomotion, attaches to the lateral sides of the haemal arches. [1] In 1956, Alfred Sherwood Romer hypothesized that the position of the first haemal arch was sexually dimorphic in crocodilians and ...

  9. Equine anatomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_anatomy

    The hoof (including the frog - the V-shaped part on the bottom of the horses hoof) is a very important part of the circulatory system. As the horse puts weight onto the hoof, the hoof wall is pushed outwards and the frog compressed, driving blood out of the frog, the digital pad, and the laminae of the hoof.