AMPHIBIANS
101
Caecilian
Gymnopis multiplicata
Oriental fire-bellied frog
Bombina orientalis
Tiger
salamander
Ambystoma tigrinum
European
common frog
Rana temporaria
Emperor newt
Tylototriton shanjing
TAKE A LOOK: FROG FEET
Golden poison
dart frog
Phyllobates terribilis
■ Length 6–12 in (15–30 cm)
■ Weight 4–6 oz (100–150 g)
■ Location Most of North America
Like most amphibians, this large
salamander begins life in
water. Most metamorphose
into land-dwelling adults but
some manage to mature and breed
without ever leaving the water.
On land, tiger salamanders live
in grasslands or woodland edges,
where they hunt insects, worms,
and even mice and frogs.
u WEBBED FEET Common
frogs have webbed, flipperlike
hind feet to help them swim.
u DIRTY FEET Burrowing
frogs have strong feet for loosening
and shoveling soil.
u STICKY FEET Tree
frogs have sticky toe pads
to provide extra grip.
Amphibians usually live in
damp, humid, or sheltered
places, which helps them
keep their skin moist. Their
ability to swim, walk, hop,
climb, and even glide
means they are able to live
a wide variety of lifestyles.
The frogs shown here have
feet adapted to very
different habitats.
■ Length 21 ⁄ 4 –3^1 ⁄ 2 in (6–9 cm)
■ Weight 1–1^1 ⁄ 4 oz (25–35 g)
■ Location Europe
A familiar animal in Europe, the common
frog lives and breeds in pools and damp
places. In climates with harsh winters it
may hibernate for several months in a
moist burrow or in mud at the bottom
of a pool. Prey, including slugs, worms,
and insects, are whipped
into the frog’s
large mouth
with its sticky
tongue.
■ Length 11 ⁄ 4 –1^3 ⁄ 4 in (3–4.5 cm)
■ Weight 1 ⁄ 8 –^1 ⁄ 4 oz (3–5 g)
■ Location Colombia, South America
This frog’s striking colors carry a serious
warning. The toxin that secretes from glands
in its skin is the most deadly poison produced
by any vertebrate animal, and predators will
avoid contact with
the frog at all costs.
There are three
varieties of poison
dart frog—gold (like
this one), green,
and orange.
■ Length 13 ⁄ 4 –3^1 ⁄ 4 in (4–8 cm)
■ Weight 3 ⁄ 4 –1 oz (20–30 g)
■ Location China, Russia, and Korea
The magnificent colors of the fire-bellied
frog earn the species its name and warn
predators about the poison glands in its skin.
The frogs live in humid forests and spend
most of their time wallowing in shallow
water. Their vision is limited to detecting
movement, so potential
prey that does not
move may be lucky
and get away.
■ Length 20 in (50 cm)
■ Weight Exact weight unknown
■ Location Tropical forests
This strange legless and eyeless
creature belongs to the smallest group
of amphibians, the caecilians. They spend
their lives burrowing through the warm,
damp leaf litter or soil of tropical forests.
Earthworms happen to be the caecilian’s
favorite prey, which they hunt by smell,
using short tentacles to pick up the
earthworm’s faint chemical signals.
Rather than spawning eggs, this species
gives birth to live young that look like
miniature adults.
■ Length 20 in (17 cm)
■ Weight Exact weight unknown
■ Location Yunnan Province, China
This handsome newt is at risk in its native
China, where it is collected for food, the
pet trade, and for use in traditional
medicine. Adults live on land most of the
year, but return to the shallow pool where
they were born to find a mate and lay eggs,
which are deposited carefully on water
weeds. The name “shanjing” means
mountain spirit in
Mandarin.
2–5 5–8 16
(^20)??
LIVING WORLD