Bouche d'une grenouille

Bouche d'une grenouille
Bouche d'une grenouille: amphibien, vivant près des lacs et étangs, pourvu de palmes aux pattes postérieures. Se déplace en nageant et en sautant.
Dents vomériennes: dents enchâssées dans le vomer de la grenouille.
Ouverture de l'oesophage: début ouvert de la deuxième partie du tube digestif.
Orifice du sac vocal (mâle): ouverture de la poche relative à la voix de la grenouille mâle.
Langue: organe gustatif de la grenouille lui servant aussi à capturer ses proies.
Glotte: ouverture du larynx.
Orifice de la trompe d'Eustache: ouverture au niveau de la gorge étant reliée à l'oreille.
Dents maxillaires: dents enchâssées dans l'os de la mâchoire de la grenouille.
Narines internes: orifices de la voie respiratoire situés dans la bouche de la grenouille.

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EN : Amphibian
FR : Amphibia
ES : Amphibia

Amphibia

Amphibians, class Amphibia, such as frogs, toads, salamandesr, newts, and gymnophiona, are cold-blooded animals that metamorphose from a juvenile, water-breathing form to an adult, air-breathing form. Typically, amphibians have four limbs. Unlike other land animals (amniotes), amphibians lay eggs in water, as their fish ancestors did. Amphibians are superficially similar to reptiles. For the purpose of reproduction most amphibians are bound to have fresh water. A few tolerate brackish water, but there are no true seawater amphibians. Several hundred frog species in adaptive radiations, however, do not need any water whatsoever. They reproduce via direct development, an ecological and evolutionary adaptation that has allowed them to be completely independent from free-standing water. Almost all of these frogs live in wet tropical rainforests and their eggs hatch directly into miniature versions of the adult, passing through the tadpole stage within the egg. Several species have also adapted to arid and semi-arid environments, but most of them still need water to lay their eggs. Symbiosis with single celled algae that lives in the jelly-like layer of the eggs has evolved several times. The larvae breathe with exterior gills. After hatching, they start to transform gradually into the adult's appearance. This process is called metamorphosis. Typically, the animals then leave the water and become terrestrial adults, but there are many interesting exceptions to this general way of reproduction.

Animation : Amphibiens