Frog Dissection Guide
Frog Dissection Guide
Name ______________
Frog Dissection Guide
Purpose:
Materials:
preserved frog, dissecting tray, dissecting microscope, pins, blunt and sharp
probes, scissors, scalpel.
Special notes:
1. Work with a partner or in groups of 3.
2. If your dissection takes more than 1 class, write your name on a tag, place your specimen in
a plastic bag and place in the fridge.
3. When finished with your dissection, dispose of your frog in the special biobags provided.
4. Rinse all instruments including your dissecting tray.
5. Wash your hands with soap and water before leaving the lab.
6. Use scalpel to start each incision and then finish the incision with dissecting scissors.
Remember to cut away from your hands.
7. All frog parts must be disposed of in special biobag provided.
Procedure:
I.) External Anatomy
1. Place the preserved frog in a dissecting tray.
3. Identify the eyes, which have a non-moveable upper and lower lid, but can be covered with a
nictitating membrane which serves to moisten the eye.
4. Locate the tympanum behind each eye.
5. Examine the external nares (nostrils). Insert a probe into the external nares and note that it
protrudes from one of the paired small openings, the internal nares inside the mouth cavity.
6. Identify the paired appendages. The short forelimb consist of an upper arm (forearm) and a
hand. The hand has four digits and a rudimentary vestigial thumb. The hind limb consists of a
thigh, shank, and a foot. The foot has five digits and a rudimentary sixth digit.
2. Identify the tongue attached to the lower jaw's anterior end. What is unusual about the
attachment of the tongue? What is the advantage of this attachment?
3. Find the Eustachian tube opening into the angle of the jaws. These tubes lead to the ears.
Eustachian tubes equalize air pressure in the ears. This ensures proper tightness of the
membrane for good hearing. With your probe, follow a Eustachian tube up to the tympanic
membrane. Now find the same tympanic membrane from the outside, behind the eye.
4. Examine the maxillary teeth located along the rim of the upper jaw. Another set of teeth, the
vomerine teeth, is present just behind the mid portion of the upper jaw. What might be their
function? Vomerine teeth are absent in toads.
5. If your frog is a male, locate the openings to vocal sacs in the floor of the lower jaw near the
hinge joints. Why do males have vocal sacs?
6. Locate the glottis, a slit through which air passes in and out of the trachea, the short tube
from the glottis to the lungs.
7. Identify the esophagus. which lies dorsal and posterior to the glottis and leads to the stomach.
14. Locate the yellow fat bodies and carefully remove them.
2. Identify the lungs, two small sacs on either side of the midline and partially hidden under the
liver. Trace the path of air from the external nares to the lungs. The lungs are shallow and do
not supply enough oxygen to support the frog without help of the skin and mouth lining.
3. Locate the liver, the large, prominent, dark-brown organ in mid ventral portion of trunk.
2. Slit open the side of the stomach, and notice its ribbed internal surface. Try to identify its
contents. Remove a short piece of the small intestine, and examine the inner lining through a
dissecting microscope.
3. Find the small intestine and the large intestine, which enters the cloaca. The cloaca lies
beneath the pubic bone and is a general receptacle for the intestine, the reproductive system,
and the urinary system. It opens to the outside by way of the anus. Trace the path of food in the
digestive tract from the mouth to the cloaca.
4. As you lift the small intestine you will see the pancreas, a thin, yellowish ribbon, between
the small intestine and the stomach.
4. Locate the spleen, a small pea-shaped body near the stomach. It produces new blood cells and
disposes of old ones.
2. The bladder is a thin sac attached to the cloaca, it may be difficult to locate. Identify the
urinary bladder, attached to the ventral wall of the cloaca. In frogs, urine backs up into the
bladder from the cloaca.
3. The light stripe lying on the ventral side of each kidney is the adrenal gland.
X.) Cleanup
1. Dispose of all frog parts properly in the container marked Animal Waste. Do not leave any of
parts in the trash cans or sink.
2. Rinse and dry all equipment used, including the dissecting pan.
Name:
vocal sacs
nictitating membrane
tympanum
vestigial thumb
eustachian tube
tongue
Part C: Respiration
Part
glottis
Function
trachea
vocal cords
lung
Part D: Heart
Part
right atrium
Function
left atrium
ventricle
The ventricle has thicker, more muscular walls than the atria. Relate this difference in wall
structure to the functions of the 2 types of heart chamber.
Part E: Digestion
List the organs of digestion in order from the esophagus to cloaca.
How are the relative lengths of the frog's small intestine and large intestine related to their
functions?
The cloaca is used by 2 other body systems other than digestion. What are they?
gall bladder
spleen
Function
Function
testes
vasa efferential
ovaries
oviducts
A mature female may have its body cavity full of black and white eggs. The black portion of the
egg contains the living embryo. The white portion is yolk, containing stored food. When placed
in water the eggs will float with the light side down. What is the advantage of this?
If your frog is an immature female, you will find 2 grayish or pinkish ovaries in either side of
the abdominal cavity. The testes of the male are in the corresponding positions. Attached to
these organs are yellow fat bodies. What is the function of fat bodies?
During one mating of frogs, the female lays some 2,000 to 3,000 eggs in water as the male
sheds millions of sperm over them. How do these large numbers relate to the frogs fitness for
life in water?
Part H - Brain
What do the large optic lobes of a frogs brain suggest?