Amphibians live both on land and in water, breathing through lungs, skin, and mouth. They are cold-blooded, soft-skinned, and most give live birth to larvae that live in water before transforming into land-dwelling adults. The three orders of amphibians are Caudata (salamanders), Gymnophiona (caecilians), and Anura (frogs and toads). Salamanders have tails and internal fertilization, while frogs and toads lack tails and have external fertilization through aquatic eggs and larvae. Caecilians are worm-like and mostly blind, living underground.
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2. GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS
Amphi- double; bios- life; living on land and breeding in
water
Respiration by lungs, skin and buccopharynx
Larval forms with lateral line system
Exclusively fresh-water; no marine forms
Poikilothermic(cold-blooded)
Exoskeleton absent
Soft, moist and glandular skin without scales
Homodont teeth
Skull is dicondylic
Protrusible tongue
Cloaca present
3-chambered heart(2atrium+1ventricle)
3. GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS
R.B.C. large oval and nucleated
Mesonephric kidneys
Amphibians are ureotelic
Middle ear with single rod like bone collumella auris
Cranial nerves 10 pairs
Sexual dimorphism found
Oviparous and external fertilization
Indirect development through tadpole larva mostly
Anamniotes(extra-embryonic membrane amnion absent)
Batrachology-study of amphibian
Evolved from crossopterygian fishes
5. ORDER CAUDATA
115-350 described species of salamendars
Mostly terristrial, few lives in moist forest floor
and have aquatic larva
Posses tail throughout their life
Their size varies from few centimeters to 1.5m
Members of the family Salamandridea are
commonly called newts
Most salamanders have internal fertilization
6. ORDER CAUDATA
Male produce gelatinous spermatophores that is
caped with sperm and deposited on the
substrate.
Female pick up the sperm with cloaca and store
the sperm in spermatheca
Eggs are fertilized as they pass through the
cloaca and are usually deposited singly, in
clumps or in strings.
Larva posses external gills, a tail fins, larval
denitition and rudimentary tongue
7. ORDER CAUDATA
The aquatic larval stage usually
metamorphoses in to terrestrial adult
Other show incomplete metmorphosis and
are paedomorphc that is they became
sexually mature while still showing larval
characteristics
8. ORDER GYMNOPHIONA
Member are caecilians
160 described species
They are worm like burrowers
Feed on worms and other invertebrates in
the soil
Body segmented because of folds in the skin
that overlie separations between muscles
bundles
9. ORDER GYMNOPHIONA
Retractile tentacles between their eyes and
nostrils may transport chemicals from
environment to the olfactory cells in the roof of
the mouth
Skin covers the eyes so caecilians are probably
nearly blind
Fertilization is internal
Larval stages are often passed in the oviduct,
other lay egg that develop either into aquatic
larvae or embryo that develop on land
10. ORDER ANURA
Include 3500 species
Frogs and toads
Lives in moist environment
Few may occur in dry dessert
Adult lack tail
Vertebrae fuse into a rodlike structure called
urostyle
11. ORDER ANURA
Hindlimb are long and muscular and end in
webbed feet
Fertilizartion is external
Eggs and larva are typically aquatic
Tadpole have well developed tail
larva are herbivores and posses
proteinaceous beaklike structures used in
feeding
12. ORDER ANURA
They undergo metaamorphosis
Toad usually refers to anurans with relatively
dry and warty skin that are more terresitrial
than other members