Amphibians Flashcards

1
Q

anura

A

without tails
frogs and toads

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2
Q

frogs vs toads

A

frogs have protective mucoid skin
toads are terrestrial, drier, have thick “warty skin”, have mucus and poison glands

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3
Q

which frog is most commonly used in biomedical research?

A

African clawed frog

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4
Q

caudata

A

with tails
salamanders and newts

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5
Q

salmanders

A

used for limb regeneration studies
some like axolotls retain their larval state their whole life (neotony)

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6
Q

gymnophiona

A

limbless, wormlike
caecilians

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7
Q

life cycle

A

metamorphosis —> air breathing adult
ex: egg —> larval —> tadpole with gills —> air breathing frogs and toads

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8
Q

respiratory system

A

gills
terrestrials have lung structure (simple air sacs)
no diaphragm, use intercostal muscle and limb movement to pull chest up and out
skin surface can be used for gas exchange: can use MS-222 or isoflurane absorbed by skin for anesthesia

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9
Q

excreting waste

A

aquatics excrete ammonia as waste like fish through gills if present or through skin if they don’t have gills
terrestrials: main waste is urea through primitive kidneys

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10
Q

oviparous

A

lay eggs (spawn) that are fertilized outside of the body
most amphibians are oviparous
some salamanders are viviparous: birth live young

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11
Q

amphibian blood cells

A

fragile, albumin helps stabilize cell membranes

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12
Q

diagnostics

A

parasitology: cestodes, trematodes, nematodes, protozoans
- soaking and medicated baths are a common treatment for parasites
phlebotomy: ventral abdominal vein, ventral coccygeal vein, lingual plexus

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13
Q

what is the most common cause of health conditions?

A

husbandry related issues

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14
Q

metabolic bone disease (MBD)

A

rubber jaw
combination of poor nutrition (high phosphorus/low calcium and low vitamin D)
could be caused by kidney disease and inadequate UVB which leads to low vitamin D and calcium

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15
Q

bacterial dermatosepticemia

A

“red leg” or “pink belly”
most commonly aeromonas bacteria from poor husbandry and stress

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16
Q

chytridiomycosis fungal infection

A

rough, irregular lesions
most serious fungal disease
major contributor to threat of extinction
caused by saprolegnia water mold: white cottony growth

17
Q

what is another amphibian fungal infection?

A

Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis

18
Q

husbandry: ectothermic

A

too hot = anorectic/agitated
too cold = lethargy/bloating

19
Q

husbandry: diet

A

store brought frogs may have never encountered a cricket so they may experience extreme stress, trauma, and starvation
big frogs eat mouse/rat pups
may need to gut load prey with supplements

20
Q

husbandry: lighting/humidity

A

full spectrum lighting
humidity: de-chlorinated waters, sphagnum moss, hygrometers

21
Q

husbandry: substrate

A

preferred: cage carpeting, astroturf, newspaper, shelf-paper
most particulate has disadvantages: sand, gravel, walnut, wood, calcisand - causes obstructions, nutritional deficiencies, underheating, dehydration, inappropriate UV

22
Q

steatitis

A

inflammation of fatty tissue
caused by vitamin E deficiency, rodents stored too long, fed only 1 diet type

23
Q

herbivore diet

A

supplement with betacarotine

24
Q

insectivore diet

A

dust/gut load
healthy, well-fed bugs
supplement calcium

25
Q

carnivore diet

A

whole prey items, preferred not live prey, supplement with betacarotine (pigment in colorful veggies, precursor of vitamin A), supplement calcium
prey should be no bigger than biggest part of amphibians’ body

26
Q

young prey

A

called pinkies
young bones, less calcium

27
Q

feeding schedule

A

juvies: about 2x a week
adults: 1-2x a week
larger species: monthly

28
Q

anorexia

A

is a clinical sign of disease