Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Announcements • If caught with food or drinks out, then expect to throw it in the trash – All items must be put away in your backpack. • All Invertebrate RETESTS have been sent to the learning labs if you are a freshman or sophomore. Others must retest with me before or after school. • Vocab Quiz this FRIDAY • Project due NEXT Thursday, Jan. 31 Amphibians Class Amphibia Characteristics • Integumentary – Moist skin with mucus glands • Skeletal/Muscular – Endoskeleton – Adult: legs for walking or jumping; no legs – Larva: swim Characteristics • Circulatory – Adult: 3 chambered heart, closed-double loop – Larva: 2 chambered heart • Reproductive – External fertilization; eggs must stay moist (no shell) Characteristics • Nervous – Brain; eyes w/ nictitating membrane; tympanic membrane for hearing; lateral lines • Respiratory – Adult: through lungs, skin, & lining of the mouth – Larva: through skin and gills Characteristics • Digestive – Complete digestive system (mouth --> anus) – Adult: carnivore – Larva: herbivore or filter feeder • Excretory – Kidneys filter wastes from blood, urine travels through ureters to urinary bladder and out through cloaca Characteristics • Body Temperature – Ectothermic • Habitat – Adult: live on land near water – Larva: live in water Lifecycle of a Frog Adult Frog Young Frog Adults are typically ready to breed in about one to two years. Frog eggs are laid in water and undergo external fertilization. Fertilized Eggs Tadpoles Tadpoles gradually grow limbs, lose their tails and gills, and become meat-eaters as they develop into terrestrial adults. The eggs hatch into tadpoles a few days to several weeks later. Evolution • The first amphibians looked similar to lobe-finned fish Groups of Amphibians • Salamanders – have long bodies & tails, most have 4 legs, usually live in moist woods Groups of Amphibians • Frogs & toads – both jump & lack tails; frogs more closely tied to water Groups of Amphibians • Caecilians – legless animals; live in water or burrow in moist soil; many have fishlike scales Assignment • Frog Paper Dissection – Color all organs & the frog – Attach organs correctly & label them – On the back, answer the following in complete sentences: 1. What adaptations helped amphibians evolve into land animals? (pg. 783) 2. Why are amphibians restricted to reproducing in moist environments? 3. What special structure do amphibians have that protects the eyes while under water? 4. Explain the path of circulation in an amphibian. (pg. 785)