Online Encyclopedia

FROG

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 241 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FROG  ,' a name in

zoology, of somewhat wide application, strictly for an animal belonging to the
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family Ranidae, but also used of some other families of the order Ecaudata of the sub-class
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Batrachia (q.v.) . Frogs proper are typified by the
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common
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British
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species, Rana temporaria, and its allies, such as the edible frog, R. esculenta, and the
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American bull-frog R. catesbiana . The genus Rana may be defined as firmisternal Ecaudata with cylindrical transverse processes to the sacral vertebra, teeth in the upper jaw and on the vomer, a protrusible tongue which is
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free and forked behind, a
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horizontal pupil and more or less webbed toes . It includes about 200 species, distributed over the whole
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world ' The word " frog " is in O.E. frocga or frox, cf . Dutch vorsch, Ger . Frosch; Skeat suggests a possible
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original source in the root meaning " to jump," " to spring," cf . Ger. froh, glad, joyful and " frolic." The
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term is also applied to the following
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objects: the horny
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part in the center of a horse's hoof ; an
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attachment to a belt for suspending a sword,
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bayonet, &c.; a fastening for the front of a coat, still used in military
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uniforms, consisting of two buttons on opposite sides joined by ornamental looped braids; and, in
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rail-way construction, the point where two rails
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cross . These may be various transferred applications of the name of the animal, but the " frog " of a horse was also called " frush," probably a corruption of the French name fourchette, lit. little fork . The ornamental braiding is also more probably due to "
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frock,"
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Lat. floccus . with the exception of the greater part of South
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America and memorial erected by the queen to Lady
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Augusta Stanley (d .
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Australia . Some of the species are thoroughly aquatic and have fully webbed toes, others are terrestrial, except during the breeding season, others are adapted for burrowing, by means of the much-enlarged and sharp-edged tubercle at the
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base of the inner toe, whilst not a few have the tips of the digits dilated into disks by which they are able to climb on trees .

In most of the older classifications

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great importance was attached to these physiological characters, and a number of genera were established which, owing to the numerous annectent forms which have since been discovered, must be abandoned . The arboreal species were thus associated with the true tree-frogs, regardless of their
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internal structure . We now know that such adaptations are of comparatively small importance, and cannot be utilized for establishing groups higher than genera in a natural or phylogenetic classification . The tree-frogs, Hylidae, with which the arboreal Ranidae were formerly grouped, show in their anatomical structure a close resemblance to the toads, Bufonidae, and are therefore placed far away from the true frogs, however great the superficial resemblance between them . Some frogs grow to a large
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size . The bull-frog of the eastern
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United States and
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Canada, reaching a length of nearly 8 in. from snout to vent, long regarded as the giant of the genus, has been surpassed by the
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discovery of Rana guppyi (8; in.) in the Solomon Islands, and of Rana
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goliath (ro in.) in South Cameroon . The family Ranidae embraces a large number of genera, some of which are very remarkable . Among these may be mentioned the hairy frog of West Africa, Trichobatrachus robustus, some specimens of which have the sides of the
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body and of the
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hind limbs covered with long villosities, the
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function of which is unknown, and its ally Gampsosteonyx batesi, in which the last phalanx of the fingers and toes is sharp, claw-like and perforates the skin . To this family also belong the Rhacophorus of eastern
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Asia, arboreal frogs, some of which are remarkable for the extremely
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developed webs between the fingers and toes, which are believed to act as a parachute when the frog leaps from the branches of trees (flying-frog of A . R . Wallace), whilst others have been observed to make aerial nests between leaves overhanging
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water, a habit which is shared by their near allies the Chiromantis of tropical Africa . Dimorphognathus, from West Africa, is the unique example of a sexual dimorphism in the dentition, the
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males being provided with a series of large sharp teeth in the
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lower jaw, which in the
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female, as in most other members of the family, is edentulous .

The curious horned frog of the Solomon Islands, Ceratobatrachus guentheri, which can hardly be separated from the Ranidae, has teeth in the lower jaw in both sexes, whilst a few forms, such as Dendrobates and Cardioglossa, which on this

account have been placed in a distinct family, have no teeth at all, as in toads . These facts militate strongly against the importance which was once attached to the dentition in the classification of the tailless batrachians . FROG-BIT, in botany, the
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English name for a small floating herb known botanically as Hydrocharis Morsus-Ranae, a member of the order Hydrocharideae, a family of Monocotyledons . The plant has rosettes of roundish floating leaves, and multiplies like the strawberry plant by means of runners, at the end of which new leaf-rosettes develop . Staminate and pistillate flowers are borne on different
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plants; they have three small green sepals and three broadly ovate white membranous petals . The fruit, which is fleshy, is not found in Britain . The plant occurs in ponds and ditches in England and is rare in Ireland .

End of Article: FROG
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FRIEDRICH WILHELM AUGUST FROEBEL (1782-1852)
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