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  2. Pig frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_frog

    Pig frogs are opportunistic feeders and will eat a wide variety of prey, including insects, worms, and small vertebrates. Their primary diet is crawfish, but like most bullfrogs, they will consume almost anything they can swallow, including insects, fish, and other frogs. They are known to feed on beetles, dragonflies, crayfish, and other ...

  3. Cope's gray treefrog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cope's_gray_treefrog

    [3] [9] [23] The diet of Cope's gray treefrog primarily consists of insects such as moths, mites, spiders, plant lice, and harvestmen. Snails have also been observed as a food source. Like most frogs, Dryophytes chrysocelis is an opportunistic feeder and may also eat smaller frogs, including other treefrogs. [24]

  4. Projectile use by non-human organisms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projectile_use_by_non...

    To swallow food the hornbill instead throws the food from the tip of its long bill backwards into the throat. [12] One example of solid projectile use among mammals is the California ground squirrel , which is known to distract predators such as the rattlesnake and gopher snake from locating their nest burrows by kicking sand into their eyes ...

  5. Frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog

    [8] [9] [10] The origins of the word frog are uncertain and debated. [11] The word is first attested in Old English as frogga, but the usual Old English word for the frog was frosc (with variants such as frox and forsc), and it is agreed that the word frog is somehow related to this.

  6. Illinois chorus frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illinois_Chorus_Frog

    The Illinois chorus frogs' preferred habitat in Arkansas includes the patch of sandy wetland soil surrounding Stuttgart, Arkansas where rice is grown. However, the invention of laser land-levelling , and its use by rice paddy operators, has eliminated 61% of the subspecies' range in this southern state.

  7. Wood frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_frog

    The wood frog has evolved traits that prevent their cells from being damaged when frozen and thawed out. The wood frog has developed various adaptations that allow it to effectively combat prolonged ischemia/anoxia and extreme cellular dehydration. One crucial mechanism utilized by the wood frog is the accumulation of high amounts of glucose ...

  8. Amphibian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphibian

    The genome sizes range from 0.95 to 11.5 pg in frogs, from 13.89 to 120.56 pg in salamanders, and from 2.94 to 11.78 pg in caecilians. [ 137 ] The large genome sizes have prevented whole- genome sequencing of amphibians although a number of genomes have been published recently.

  9. Frog legs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog_legs

    Frog legs are also fried in margarine and sweet soy sauce or tomato sauce, battered and deep fried, or grilled. Frog eggs are also served in banana leaves (pepes telur kodok). The dried and crispy fried frog skin is also consumed as krupuk crackers; the taste is similar to fried fish skin. [10]