Difference between revisions of "Bullfrog" - New World Encyclopedia

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| synonyms = <center>''Rana catesbeiana''
 
| synonyms = <center>''Rana catesbeiana''
 
}}
 
}}
'''Bullfrog''' is the common name of the largest [[North America]]n [[frog]], ''Lithobates catesbeianus'' or ''Rana catesbeiana'', a semi-aquatic, heavy-bodied frog native to eastern [[North America]], from [[Mexico]] to southern [[Canada]], but introduced into western North America and other countries. While traditionally classified as ''Rana catesbeiana'', recent taxonomies place it in the ''Lithobates'' [[genus]] (Frost 2006a; Frost 2006b). It is in the [[Ranidae]] family ("true frogs") of the order [[Anura ]]. Other large frogs in other species are sometimes called bullfrog and ''Lithobates catesbeiana'' is sometimes distinguished as the '''American Bullfrog'''.
+
'''Bullfrog''' is the common name of the largest [[North America]]n [[frog]], ''Lithobates catesbeianus'' or ''Rana catesbeiana'', a semi-aquatic, heavy-bodied frog native to eastern [[North America]], but introduced into western North America and other countries. While traditionally classified as ''Rana catesbeiana'', recent taxonomies place it in the ''Lithobates'' [[genus]] (Frost 2006a; Frost 2006b). It is in the [[Ranidae]] family ("true frogs") of the order [[Anura ]]. Other large frogs in other species are sometimes called bullfrog and ''Lithobates catesbeiana'' is sometimes distinguished as the '''American bullfrog''' and '''North American bullfrog'''.
  
 
==Distribution and habitat==
 
==Distribution and habitat==
 
[[Image:Bullfrog - natures pics.jpg|thumb|240px|Bullfrog in typical aquatic habitat.]]
 
[[Image:Bullfrog - natures pics.jpg|thumb|240px|Bullfrog in typical aquatic habitat.]]
While native to eastern North America, from Mexico to Canada, the species has been introduced successfully into western North America, Central and South America, islands in the [[Caribbean]], China, Japan, Thailand, various European countries, and several oceanic islands (Grzimek et al. 2004). In [[Europe]] and the western U.S., measures are often taken to control its spread because it competes with, and often drives out, native species.
+
The bullfrog is native to North America east of the Rockies, from Nova Scotia in southern Canada to central Florida and west to the east coast of Wisconsin and across the Great Plains (Bruening 2002). While some consider northern [[Mexico]] as part of the species natural range (Grzimek et al. 2004), Bruening notes that the natural limits are confused by introduction into such places as Mexico.  
  
Although found in many habitats, the bullfrog particularly favors larger bodies of water relative to other frogs (Grzimek et al. 2004). Bullfrogs dig into the mud to [[hibernation|hibernate]] in cold winter weather.
+
The species has been introduced successfully into western North America, Central and South America, islands in the [[Caribbean]], China, Japan, Thailand, various European countries, and several oceanic islands (Grzimek et al. 2004). In [[Europe]] and the western U.S., measures are often taken to control its spread because it competes with, and often drives out, native species.
 +
 
 +
The bullfrog must live in water. Although found in many habitats (lake, pond, river, bog), the bullfrog particularly favors larger bodies of water relative to other frogs (Grzimek et al. 2004) and generally water that is warm, still, and shallow (Bruening 2002). Bullfrogs dig into the mud to [[hibernation|hibernate]] in cold winter weather.
  
 
== Physical description ==
 
== Physical description ==
The bullfrog is a large species of the Ranidae family and the largest [[frog]] in North America, reaching a length of 8 inches (203 millimeters) and a weight of up to 3.3 pounds (1.5 kilograms) (Grzimek et al. 2004). Females are typically larger than males.  
+
The bullfrog is a large species of the Ranidae family and the largest "true frog" (family Ranidae)  in North America It reaches a length of 8 inches (203 millimeters) and a weight of up to 3.3 pounds (1.5 kilograms) (Grzimek et al. 2004), and the typical length is from 90 to 152 millimeters. Females are typically larger than males.  
  
 
Bullfrogs are generally varying shades of [[green]], olive, or [[brown]], with  dark brown, dark green, or [[black]] blotching and a [[yellow]] or [[white]] underside.  
 
Bullfrogs are generally varying shades of [[green]], olive, or [[brown]], with  dark brown, dark green, or [[black]] blotching and a [[yellow]] or [[white]] underside.  
Line 44: Line 46:
 
The bullfrog uses its skin, [[Buccal pumping|buccal cavity]], and [[lungs]] for respiration. [[Cutaneous]] ("skin") gas exchange is very important in all [[amphibian]]s.  
 
The bullfrog uses its skin, [[Buccal pumping|buccal cavity]], and [[lungs]] for respiration. [[Cutaneous]] ("skin") gas exchange is very important in all [[amphibian]]s.  
  
The tympanum is relatively large, particularly in males (Grzimek et al. 2004). Males also have nuptial pads, yellowish throats, and single internal vocal sacs.
+
The tympanum is relatively large, particularly in males (Grzimek et al. 2004), where it is much larger than the eye; in females, it is as large or smaller than the eye (Bruening 2002). Males also have nuptial pads, and single internal vocal sacs, and a yellow throat in breeding season, in contrast to the white throat of the female (Bruening 2002).
  
=== Behavior, feeding, life cycle, and reproduction ===
+
=== Life cycle, behavior, and feeding ===
 
[[Image:Rana_catesbeiana.jpg|left|240px|thumb|Bullfrog, ''R. catesbeiana'']]
 
[[Image:Rana_catesbeiana.jpg|left|240px|thumb|Bullfrog, ''R. catesbeiana'']]
  
The [[life cycle]] of bullfrogs, like that of other [[frog]]s, consists of the main stages of egg, tadpole, [[metamorphosis]], and adult.
+
The [[life cycle]] of bullfrogs, like that of other [[frog]]s, consists of the main stages of egg, tadpole, [[metamorphosis]], and adult.  
  
 +
The male reproductive organs are the [[testes]] and their duct, and the female have [[ovaries]]. In the spring the male calls the female from the water. Bullfrogs are aptly named since their call is a loud, guttural bellow that carries a long distance, giving the impression that the frog is much larger than it actually is, which is an advantage in keeping predators away. Males are territorial and aggressive (Grzimek et al. 2004).
  
 +
The female lays up to 25,000 [[egg (biology)|eggs]] in floating egg masses in the water. The eggs are 1.2 to 1.7 millimeters (0.05-0.07 inches) in diameter and pigmented at one pole (Grzimek et al. 2004). Spotted tadpoles emerge from the egg masses after about four days after fertilization (Bruening 2002).
  
 
+
[[Image:Bullfrog_Tadpole.jpg|240px|thumb|Bullfrog tadpole]]
 
+
Tadpole development, which is slow, may take between one and three years for the transformation from a tadpole to an adult (Bruening 2002). It may even take up to four years in northern latitudes (Quebec, Canada) (Grzimek et al. 2004). There are three major changes that take place during the metamorphosis:  
Bullfrogs are aptly named since their call is a loud, guttural bellow that carries a long distance, giving the impression that the frog is much larger than it actually is, which is an advantage in keeping predators away.
 
 
 
 
 
The male reproductive organs are the [[testes]] and their duct, and the female have [[ovaries]]. In the spring the male calls the female from the water. The female lays up to 25,000 [[egg (biology)|eggs]], and these eggs become tadpoles. Their [[Metamorphosis (biology)|metamorphosis]] brings them the organs that are only found in the adult frogs and takes between 12-24 months. There are three major changes that take place during the metamorphosis:  
 
 
#[[Premetamorphisis]] which is when the [[embryo]] [[genesis]] and growth and development occur, during this time the [[thyroid gland]] is absent.
 
#[[Premetamorphisis]] which is when the [[embryo]] [[genesis]] and growth and development occur, during this time the [[thyroid gland]] is absent.
 
#[[Prometamorphisis]] is the period in which the concentration of the [[endogenous thyroid hormone]] rises.
 
#[[Prometamorphisis]] is the period in which the concentration of the [[endogenous thyroid hormone]] rises.
 
#[[Metamorphosis (biology)|Metamorphosis]] is the period when the tadpole's tail shrinks back into the frog's body. Other organs also undergo changes such as the [[liver]] and the [[intestine]]. The [[gills]] are absorbed as well.  
 
#[[Metamorphosis (biology)|Metamorphosis]] is the period when the tadpole's tail shrinks back into the frog's body. Other organs also undergo changes such as the [[liver]] and the [[intestine]]. The [[gills]] are absorbed as well.  
  
The adult frog can live up to 13 years.
+
After metamorphosis, it takes an additional two years to reach sexual maturity (Bruening 2002). The adult frog can live up to 13 years, with the record of an animal in captivity being 16 years. The average bullfrog lives from seven to nine years in the wild (Bruening 2002).  
[[Image:Bullfrog_Tadpole.jpg|240px|thumb|Bullfrog tadpole]]
+
 
 +
Adult bullfrogs eat insects, snakes, annelids, crustaceans, frogs, tadpoles, eggs, and almost anything they can capture, with cases of bullfrogs eating [[bat]]s (Bruening 2002).  They hunt day and night, using a technique of waiting for the prey to come within the range of their tongue, which they use to bring the prey back into their mouth. Tadpoles largely eat aquatic plants (Bruening 2002).
  
 
== Human use ==
 
== Human use ==
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Frog_and_Toad.jpg|right|thumb|250px|A captive matured female American Bullfrog housed with a full-grown male Asiatic Toad [[Bufo melanostictus]].]] —>
 
While occasionally kept as pets, the American Bullfrog provides a minor [[frog legs|food source]], especially in the [[Southern United States]] and in some areas of the [[Midwestern United States]]. In a few locations they are commercially cultured in ponds, but the traditional way of hunting them is to paddle or pole silently by canoe or flatboat in streams or swamps at night; when the frog call is heard, a light is shined on the frog to temporarily inhibit it. The frog will not jump into deeper water as long as movement is slow and steady. When close enough, the frog is [[Trident|gigged]] and brought into the boat. The only parts eaten are the rear legs, which resemble small [[chicken]] [[poultry|drumsticks]] and, sometimes, the backs, and they are usually fried for consumption.
 
 
The American Bullfrog is also used as a specimen for dissection in many schools across the world.
 
 
  
 +
Bullfrogs are important ecologically, scientifically, and as a food source.
  
 +
Ecologically, they are integral to food chains, both as prey and predator, and they help to control insect pests. Scientifically, they are used for medical research, because of similarity between their skeletal, muscle, digestive, and nervous systems with other animals (Bruening 2002). They serve as laboratory animals for dissection in some high school and college classrooms. They are occasionally kept as pets.
  
== External links ==
+
The American Bullfrog provides a minor [[frog legs|food source]], especially in the [[Southern United States]] and in some areas of the [[Midwestern United States]]. In a few locations they are commercially cultured in ponds, but the traditional way of hunting them is to paddle or pole silently by canoe or flatboat in streams or swamps at night; when the frog call is heard, a light is shined on the frog to temporarily inhibit it. The frog will not jump into deeper water as long as movement is slow and steady. When close enough, the frog is [[Trident|gigged]] and brought into the boat. The only parts eaten are the rear legs, which resemble small [[chicken]] [[poultry|drumsticks]] and, sometimes, the backs, and they are usually fried for consumption.
  
*[http://www.zo.utexas.edu/research/txherps/frogs/rana.catesbeiana.html Herps of Texas: ''Rana catesbeiana'']
 
*[http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/wld/frogwatch/whoswho/factshts/bullfrog.htm British Columbia Frog Watch Program: Bull Frog Fact Sheet]
 
*[http://www.pima.gov/cmo/sdcp/sdcp2/fsheets/ex/bf.html Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan, Exotic Species: Bull Frog]
 
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
Line 85: Line 80:
 
* {{IUCN2006|assessors=Santos-Barrera, G. ''et al''. |year=2004|id=58565|title=Rana catesbiana|downloaded=12 May 2006}} Database entry includes a range map and justification for why this species is of least concern.
 
* {{IUCN2006|assessors=Santos-Barrera, G. ''et al''. |year=2004|id=58565|title=Rana catesbiana|downloaded=12 May 2006}} Database entry includes a range map and justification for why this species is of least concern.
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
 +
* Bruenng, S. 2002. [http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Rana_catesbeiana.html ''Rana catesbeiana'']. ''Animal Diversity Web''. Retrieved October 21, 2007.
 +
  
 
,<ref name="Frost2006">Frost, Darrel R. 2006a. Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 4 (17 August 2006). Electronic Database accessible at http://research.amnh.org/herpetology/amphibia/index.php. American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA.</ref>
 
,<ref name="Frost2006">Frost, Darrel R. 2006a. Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 4 (17 August 2006). Electronic Database accessible at http://research.amnh.org/herpetology/amphibia/index.php. American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA.</ref>

Revision as of 22:48, 21 October 2007


American Bullfrog
Bullfrog, Lithobates catesbeianus
Bullfrog, Lithobates catesbeianus
Conservation status
Status iucn3.1 LC.svg
Least Concern
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Ranidae
Genus: Lithobates
Species: L. catesbeianus
Binomial name
Lithobates catesbeianus
(Shaw, 1802)
Bullfrog range
Bullfrog range
Synonyms
Rana catesbeiana

Bullfrog is the common name of the largest North American frog, Lithobates catesbeianus or Rana catesbeiana, a semi-aquatic, heavy-bodied frog native to eastern North America, but introduced into western North America and other countries. While traditionally classified as Rana catesbeiana, recent taxonomies place it in the Lithobates genus (Frost 2006a; Frost 2006b). It is in the Ranidae family ("true frogs") of the order Anura . Other large frogs in other species are sometimes called bullfrog and Lithobates catesbeiana is sometimes distinguished as the American bullfrog and North American bullfrog.

Distribution and habitat

Bullfrog in typical aquatic habitat.

The bullfrog is native to North America east of the Rockies, from Nova Scotia in southern Canada to central Florida and west to the east coast of Wisconsin and across the Great Plains (Bruening 2002). While some consider northern Mexico as part of the species natural range (Grzimek et al. 2004), Bruening notes that the natural limits are confused by introduction into such places as Mexico.

The species has been introduced successfully into western North America, Central and South America, islands in the Caribbean, China, Japan, Thailand, various European countries, and several oceanic islands (Grzimek et al. 2004). In Europe and the western U.S., measures are often taken to control its spread because it competes with, and often drives out, native species.

The bullfrog must live in water. Although found in many habitats (lake, pond, river, bog), the bullfrog particularly favors larger bodies of water relative to other frogs (Grzimek et al. 2004) and generally water that is warm, still, and shallow (Bruening 2002). Bullfrogs dig into the mud to hibernate in cold winter weather.

Physical description

The bullfrog is a large species of the Ranidae family and the largest "true frog" (family Ranidae) in North America It reaches a length of 8 inches (203 millimeters) and a weight of up to 3.3 pounds (1.5 kilograms) (Grzimek et al. 2004), and the typical length is from 90 to 152 millimeters. Females are typically larger than males.

Bullfrogs are generally varying shades of green, olive, or brown, with dark brown, dark green, or black blotching and a yellow or white underside.

The skeleton of an adult frog consists of bone, hyaline cartilage, and calcified cartilage. The calcified cartilage can be found throughout the body of the frog, but it is particularly more noticeable in the epiphyses of the long bones in the limbs and shoulder-gridle. The radius and ulna are fused into a single bone, the radio-ulna, and the tibia and fibula are fused into a single bone, the tibio-fibula. The vertebrae comprise ten bones; nine are true vertebrae, and the rod-shaped urostyle that is almost as long as the other nine.

A young female with a relatively small tympanic membrane

The head of the frog is flat but its form depends on the extensive separation of the jaw bones; the orbital cavities and the horizontal direction of their floor also have an effect on the form of the head. The central nervous system is made up of the spinal cord and the brain, where the spinal cord is a bit smaller than the brain. The peripheral nervous system contains the cranial nerves and spinal nerves.

They have four legs, not two hands and two legs as commonly misconceived. Front feet and back feet are both webbed. the hind limbs are long. The bull frog has large talons.

The bullfrog uses its skin, buccal cavity, and lungs for respiration. Cutaneous ("skin") gas exchange is very important in all amphibians.

The tympanum is relatively large, particularly in males (Grzimek et al. 2004), where it is much larger than the eye; in females, it is as large or smaller than the eye (Bruening 2002). Males also have nuptial pads, and single internal vocal sacs, and a yellow throat in breeding season, in contrast to the white throat of the female (Bruening 2002).

Life cycle, behavior, and feeding

Bullfrog, R. catesbeiana

The life cycle of bullfrogs, like that of other frogs, consists of the main stages of egg, tadpole, metamorphosis, and adult.

The male reproductive organs are the testes and their duct, and the female have ovaries. In the spring the male calls the female from the water. Bullfrogs are aptly named since their call is a loud, guttural bellow that carries a long distance, giving the impression that the frog is much larger than it actually is, which is an advantage in keeping predators away. Males are territorial and aggressive (Grzimek et al. 2004).

The female lays up to 25,000 eggs in floating egg masses in the water. The eggs are 1.2 to 1.7 millimeters (0.05-0.07 inches) in diameter and pigmented at one pole (Grzimek et al. 2004). Spotted tadpoles emerge from the egg masses after about four days after fertilization (Bruening 2002).

Bullfrog tadpole

Tadpole development, which is slow, may take between one and three years for the transformation from a tadpole to an adult (Bruening 2002). It may even take up to four years in northern latitudes (Quebec, Canada) (Grzimek et al. 2004). There are three major changes that take place during the metamorphosis:

  1. Premetamorphisis which is when the embryo genesis and growth and development occur, during this time the thyroid gland is absent.
  2. Prometamorphisis is the period in which the concentration of the endogenous thyroid hormone rises.
  3. Metamorphosis is the period when the tadpole's tail shrinks back into the frog's body. Other organs also undergo changes such as the liver and the intestine. The gills are absorbed as well.

After metamorphosis, it takes an additional two years to reach sexual maturity (Bruening 2002). The adult frog can live up to 13 years, with the record of an animal in captivity being 16 years. The average bullfrog lives from seven to nine years in the wild (Bruening 2002).

Adult bullfrogs eat insects, snakes, annelids, crustaceans, frogs, tadpoles, eggs, and almost anything they can capture, with cases of bullfrogs eating bats (Bruening 2002). They hunt day and night, using a technique of waiting for the prey to come within the range of their tongue, which they use to bring the prey back into their mouth. Tadpoles largely eat aquatic plants (Bruening 2002).

Human use

Bullfrogs are important ecologically, scientifically, and as a food source.

Ecologically, they are integral to food chains, both as prey and predator, and they help to control insect pests. Scientifically, they are used for medical research, because of similarity between their skeletal, muscle, digestive, and nervous systems with other animals (Bruening 2002). They serve as laboratory animals for dissection in some high school and college classrooms. They are occasionally kept as pets.

The American Bullfrog provides a minor food source, especially in the Southern United States and in some areas of the Midwestern United States. In a few locations they are commercially cultured in ponds, but the traditional way of hunting them is to paddle or pole silently by canoe or flatboat in streams or swamps at night; when the frog call is heard, a light is shined on the frog to temporarily inhibit it. The frog will not jump into deeper water as long as movement is slow and steady. When close enough, the frog is gigged and brought into the boat. The only parts eaten are the rear legs, which resemble small chicken drumsticks and, sometimes, the backs, and they are usually fried for consumption.


References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Santos-Barrera, G. et al. 2004. [1]. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species., World Conservation Union. Retrieved on 12 May 2006. Database entry includes a range map and justification for why this species is of least concern.
  • Bruenng, S. 2002. Rana catesbeiana. Animal Diversity Web. Retrieved October 21, 2007.


,[1]

[2] previously Rana catesbeiana[3])


  • Grzimek, B., D. G. Kleiman, V. Geist, and M. C. McDade. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Detroit: Thomson-Gale, 2004. ISBN 0307394913

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  1. Frost, Darrel R. 2006a. Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 4 (17 August 2006). Electronic Database accessible at http://research.amnh.org/herpetology/amphibia/index.php. American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA.
  2. Frost et al. 2006b. The amphibian tree of life. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. Number 297. New York. Issued March 15, 2006.
  3. Rana catesbeiana (TSN 173441). Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Accessed on 6 February 2006.