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AMPHIBIA , a zoological See also: term originally employed by See also: Linnaeus to denote a class of the Animal See also: Kingdom comprising crocodiles, lizards and salamanders, See also: snakes and Caeciliae, tortoises and turtles and frogs; to which, in the later See also: editions of the SystemaNaturae he added some See also: groups of fishes
.
In the Tableau Elementaire, published in 1795, Cuvier adopts Linnaeus's term in its earlier sense, but uses the French word " Reptiles," already brought into use by Brisson, as the See also: equivalent of Amphibia
.
In addition Cuvier accepts the Linnaean subdivisions of Amphibia-Reptilia for the tortoises, lizards (including crocodiles), salamanders and frogs; and Amphibia-Serpentes for the snakes, apodal lizards and Caeciliae
.
In 1799' Alexandre Brongniart pointed out the wide differences which See also: separate the frogs and salamanders (which he terms See also: Batrachia) from the other reptiles; and in 1804 P
.
A
.
Latreille,2 rightly estimating the value of these differences, though he was not an See also: original worker in the See also: field of vertebrate zoology, proposed to separate Brongniart's Batrachia from the class of Reptilia proper, as a
See also: group of equal value, for which he retained the Linnaean name of Amphibia
.
Cuvier went no further than Brongniart, and, in the Regne Animal, he dropped the term Amphibia, and substituted Reptilia for it
.
J
.
F
.
Meckel,3 on the other See also: hand, while equally accepting Brongniart's See also: classification, retained the term Amphibia in its earlier Linnaean sense; and his example has been generally followed by See also: German writers, as, for instance, by H
.
Stannius, in that remarkable monument of accurate and extensive research, the Handbuch der Zootomie (2nd ed., 1856)
.
In 1816, de Blairsville,' adopting Latreille's view, divided the Linnaean Amphibia into Squamiferes and Nudipelliferes, or Amphibiens; though he offered an alternative arrangement, in which the class Reptiles is preserved and divided into two sub-classes, the Ornithoides and the Ichthyoides
.
The latter are Brongniart's Batrachia, plus the Caeciliae, whose true See also: affinities had, in the meanwhile, been shown by A
.
M
.
C
.
Dumeril; and, in this arrangement, the name Amphibiens is restricted to See also: Proteus and See also: Siren
.
B
.
Merrem's Pholidota and Batrachia (182o), F
.
S
.
Leuckart's Monopnoa and Dipnoa (1821), J
.
See also: Miller's Squamata and Nuda (1832), are merely new names for de Blainville's Ornithoides and Ichthyoides, though See also: Muller gave far better anatomical characters of the two groups than had previously been put forward
.
More-
1 Brongniart's Essai d'une classification naturelle
See also: des reptiles was not published in full till 1803
.
It appears in the See also: volume of the Mimoires presentes a I'Inslitut See also: par See also: divers savans for 1805
.
2 Nouveau dictionnaire d'histoire naturelle, See also: xxiv., cited in Latreille's Families naturelles du regne animal
.
5 See also: System der vergleichenden Anatomie (1821)
.
' " Prodrome d'une Nouvelle Distribution du Regne Animal," Bulletin des sciences par la Societe Philomalique de See also: Paris (1816), p.113
.
See also: AMPHIBOLE 8 8 3
over, following the indications already given by K
.
E. von Baer in 1828,5 Muller calls the See also: attention of naturalists to the important fact, that while all the Squamata possess an amnion and an allantois, these structures are absent in the embryos of all the Nuda
.
An See also: appeal made by Muller for observations on the development of the Caeciliae, and of those Amphibia which retain gills or gill-clefts throughout See also: life, has unfortunately yielded no fruits
.
In 1825 P
.
A
.
Latreille6 published a new classification of the See also: Vertebrata, which are primarily divided into Haematherma, containing the three classes of Mammifera, See also: Monotremata and Aves; and Ilaemacryma, also containing three classes—Reptilia, Amphibia and See also: Pisces
.
This division of the Vertebrata into hot and cold blooded is a curiously retrograde step, only intelligible when we reflect that the excellent entomologist had no real comprehension of vertebrate See also: morphology; but he makes some See also: atonement for the blunder by steadily upholding the class distinctness of the Amphibia
.
In this he was followed by Dr J
.
E
.
See also: Gray; but Dumeril and Bibron in their
See also: great See also: work,' and Dr Gunther in his See also: Catalogue, in substance, adopted Brongniart's arrangement, the Batrachia being simply one of the four orders of the class Reptilia
.
See also: Huxley adopted Latreille's view of the distinctness of the Amphibia, as a class of the Vertebrata, co-See also: ordinate with the Mammalia, Aves, Reptilia and Pisces; and the same arrangement was accepted by See also: Gegenbaur and See also: Haeckel
.
In the Hunterian lectures delivered at the Royal See also: College of Surgeons in 1863, Huxley divided the Vertebrata into Mammals, Sauroids and Ichthyoids, the latter division containing the Amphibia and Pisces
.
Subsequently he proposed the names of See also: Sauropsida and Ichthyopsida for the Sauroids and Ichthyoids respectively
.
See also: Sir See also: Richard See also: Owen, in his work on The Anatomy of Vertebrates, followed Latreille in dividing the Vertebrata into Haematotlzerma and Haematocrya, and adopted Leuckart's term of Dipnoa for the Amphibia
.
T
.
H
.
Huxley, in the ninth edition of this See also: Encyclopaedia, treated of Brongniart's Batrachia, under the designation Amphibia, but this use of the word has not been generally accepted
.
(See BATRACHIA.) (T
.
H
.
H.; P
.
C
.
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