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Science-Related Homework Help High School Level Science Topic started by: alonzii93 on Jan 10, 2011



Title: frog dissection lab (grade 10)
Post by: alonzii93 on Jan 10, 2011
i have 4 questions that i really dont understand...

1. where is the frog's heart compared to its lungs? how do the locations of these organs affect interactions between the frogs respiratory and circulatory system?

2. describe how the frogs circulatory and digestive systems are physically connected

3. explain why the interaction of the respiratory and circulatory systems are necessary for the frogs survival

4. cold blooded animals such as frogs are able to deliver blood to their cells once their bodies warm up.  predict when you think frogs are likely to be most active?


Title: Re: frog dissection lab (grade 10)
Post by: sarah! on Jan 10, 2011
Hi :hey:

1. All the frog's internal organs--including the heart, the lungs, and all organs of digestion--are held in this single hollow space called a coelom (trunk). I don't know the second part :(.

2. The frog's digestive system includes its liver and this has hepatic portal system through which veins pass and come out (circulatory system).

3. Basically, blood cells pick up and carry oxygen from the lungs of the frog to the body's cells.

4. Obviously in warm climates because bloody functions slow down in cold environments. This is why you could literally freeze a frog for hundreds of years and defrost them back to life.

http://mariemarie0000.free.fr/fichiers/images/frog.swf


Good Luck!


Title: Re: frog dissection lab (grade 10)
Post by: star on Jan 10, 2011
Here's some information that you may find useful


ANATOMY OF THE FROG

The body structure, or anatomy, of the frog is very similar to the anatomy of man. Both man and the frog have the same kinds of organs and systems of organs. The frog's anatomy, however, is much simpler.

General Body Features

As in other higher vertebrates, the frog body may be divided into a head, a short neck, and a trunk (see Vertebrates). The flat head contains the brain, mouth, eyes, ears, and nose. A short, almost rigid neck permits only limited head movement. The stubby trunk forms walls for a single body cavity, the coelom.

Man's internal organs are housed in one of three distinct hollow cavities--the chest, the abdomen, and the pelvis. The human chest is separated from the abdomen by a powerful muscular partition, the diaphragm (see Diaphragm). There is no such partition in the frog's coelom. All the frog's internal organs--including the heart, the lungs, and all organs of digestion--are held in this single hollow space.

The Skeleton and Muscles

The frog's body is supported and protected by a bony framework called the skeleton (see Skeleton).

The skull is flat, except for an expanded area that encases the small brain. Only nine vertebrae make up the frog's backbone, or vertebral column. The human backbone has 24 vertebrae. The frog has no ribs.

The frog does not have a tail. Only a spikelike bone, the urostyle, remains as evidence that primitive frogs probably had tails. The urostyle, or "tail pillar," is a downward extension of the vertebral column.

The shoulders and front legs of the frog are somewhat similar to man's shoulders and arms. The frog has one "forearm" bone, the radio-ulna. Man has two forearm bones, the radius and the ulna. Both frog and man have one "upper arm" bone, the humerus.

(http://www.lookd.com/frogs/frog2.jpg)


The hind legs of the frog are highly specialized for leaping. The single "shinbone" is the tibiofibula. Man has two lower leg bones, the tibia and the fibula. In man and in the frog, the femur is the single upper leg (thigh) bone. A third division of the frog's leg consists of two elongated anklebones, or tarsals. These are the astragalus and the calcaneus. The astragalus corresponds to the human talus. The calcaneus in the human skeleton is the heel bone.

As in other vertebrates, the frog skeleton is moved by muscles (see Muscles). Skeleton-moving muscles are made of skeletal, or "striated," muscle. Internal organs contain smooth muscle tissue.

The Circulatory System

The frog heart is the only organ contained within the coelom which has its own protective covering. This is the pericardium (see Heart). There are two upper chambers of the heart, the right atrium and the left atrium. The frog heart, however, has only one lower chamber, a single ventricle. In man, the lower heart chamber is divided into two compartments, the right ventricle and the left ventricle.

Oxygen-laden blood and oxygen-poor blood containing waste gases are present together in the frog ventricle at all times. The oxygen-laden and oxygen-poor bloods, however, do not mix. Such mixing is prevented by a unique arrangement of the frog's heart. Instead of "perching" on top of the ventricle, the right atrium dips downward into the ventricle. This causes oxygen-poor blood entering the right atrium to pass all the way down to the bottom of the ventricle.

Meanwhile, oxygen-laden blood is received by the left atrium and enters the same single ventricle. The pool of oxygen-poor blood at the bottom of the ventricle holds up the oxygen-laden blood and prevents it from sinking to the bottom. When the oxygen-poor blood flows from the ventricle into vessels leading to the lungs, the oxygen-laden blood tries to "follow" it. The lung vessels, however, are filled with oxygen-poor blood, blocking the oxygen-laden blood and forcing oxygen-laden blood to detour into the arteries. These carry the oxygen-laden blood to the tissues.

Frog blood has both a solid and a liquid portion. The liquid plasma carries solid elements such as red blood cells and white blood cells. (See also Blood.)

The Skin and Respiratory System

The frog is covered by a soft, thin, moist skin composed of two layers, an outer epidermis and an inner dermis (see Skin). The skin does not merely protect the frog but helps in respiration (see Respiratory System).

(http://www.lookd.com/frogs/frog3.jpg)


An extensive network of blood vessels runs throughout the frog's skin. Oxygen can pass through the membranous skin, thereby entering directly into the blood. When a frog submerges beneath the water, all its respiration takes place through the skin. Oxygen is obtained directly from the water.

The frog does not breathe through its skin alone. Adult frogs have paired, simple, saclike lungs. As in man, air enters the body through two nostrils, passes through the windpipe, and is received by the lungs (see Lungs). The mechanism of breathing, however, is different in the frog from that in man. In humans breathing is aided by the ribs, the diaphragm, and the chest muscles. The frog has no ribs or diaphragm, and its chest muscles are not involved in breathing.

A frog may breathe by simply opening its mouth and letting air flow into the windpipe. However, it may also breathe with its mouth closed. The floor of the mouth is lowered, causing the frog's throat to "puff out." When the nostrils open, air enters the enlarged mouth. Then, with nostrils closed, the air in the mouth is forced into the lungs by contraction of the floor of the mouth.

The Digestive and Excretory Systems

The frog's mouth is where digestion begins. It is equipped with feeble, practically useless teeth. These are present only in the upper jaw. The frog's tongue is highly specialized. Normally, the tip of its tongue is folded backward toward the throat. From this position the frog can flick it out rapidly to grasp any passing prey. To better hold this prey, the tongue is sticky. (See also Tongue.)

Food passes from the frog's mouth into the stomach by way of the esophagus. From the stomach, the food moves into the small intestine, where most of the digestion occurs. Large digestive glands, the liver and the pancreas, are attached to the digestive system by ducts. A gall bladder is also present (see Digestive System).

Liquid wastes from the kidneys travel by way of the ureters to the urinary bladder. Solid wastes from the large intestine pass into the cloaca. Both liquid and solid waste material leave the body by way of the cloaca and the cloacal vent.

The Nervous System and Sense Organs

The frog has a highly developed nervous system. It consists of a brain, a spinal cord, and nerves. (See also Brain and Spinal Cord; Nervous System.)

The important parts of the frog brain correspond to comparable parts in the human brain. The medulla regulates automatic functions such as digestion and respiration. Body posture and muscular co-ordination are controlled by the cerebellum. The cerebrum is very small in the frog. By comparison the human cerebrum is very large. In man the cerebrum is involved in many important life processes.

Only 10 cranial nerves originate in the frog's brain. Man has 12. Similarly, the frog has only 10 pairs of spinal nerves. Man has 30 pairs.

Two simple holes make up the nostrils for the frog. There are complex valves but no long nasal passages as there are in man (see Nose). The frog's sense of smell is registered by olfactory lobes. These make up the forward portion of the brain.

The eye is crude. Its fixed lens cannot change its focus. Poorly developed eyelids do not move. To close its eye, the frog draws the organ into its socket (see Eye). A third eyelid, or nictitating membrane, may be drawn over the pulled-in eyeball.

There is no external ear (see Ear). Both eardrums, or tympanic membranes, are exposed. There is only one bone in the frog's middle ear. The human middle ear contains three bones (ossicles). As in man, semicircular canals help to maintain body balance.


Title: Re: frog dissection lab (grade 10)
Post by: Mohd David on May 8, 2020
very impressive explanation.