Biology 8 Frog Dissection Guide
Biology 8 Frog Dissection Guide
Biology 8 Frog Dissection Guide
Special notes:
1. Work with a partner or in groups of 3. 5. Wash your hands with soap and water
2. If your dissection takes more than 1 class, before leaving the lab.
write your name on a tag, place your 6. Use scalpel to start each incision and then
specimen in a plastic bag and place in the finish the incision with dissecting scissors.
fridge. Remember to cut away from your hands.
3. When finished with your dissection, dispose 7. All frog parts must be disposed of in special
of your frog in the special biobags provided. biobag provided.
4. Rinse all instruments including your
dissecting tray.
Procedure:
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.
II.) Mouth Anatomy
1. Open your frog's mouth very wide, cutting the angles of the jaw if necessary.
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.
7. Pin Skin Flaps Now that the skin has been removed, begin the
Once the skin flaps have been cut pin them to abdominal muscle incision by using the forceps
the dissection tray using several pins. to lift the muscle midwy between the rear legs
8. Begin the First Muscle Incisions of the frog. Next use the scalpel to start the
This section will describe the procedures for incision in the direction of the chin.
making the incisions through the frog's
abdominal muscles. 9. Continue the Muscle Incision
Using the scissors, carefully continue the 11. Make the Second Muscle Incisions
incision up the midline of the frog, but do not Next, using the scissors, make horizontal
cut too deeply as to damage the organs. incisions through the muscle between both the
front legs and above the back legs.
10. Turn Scissors Blades
This is very important. When you reach a point 12. Separate Muscle & Organs
just below the front legs, turn the scissors To finish opening up the frog's body cavity
blades sideways to cut through the bones in therefore exposing the abdominal region, use
the chest. This should prevent damage to the the forceps to hold the muscle flaps while
heart or other internal organs. When your separating the muscle from the tissues below
scissors reach a point just below the frog's with a scalpel.
neck you have cut far enough.
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.
4. Under the liver, find the gallbladder.
V.) Circulatory System
1. Lift the liver gently. Identify the heart, covered by a membranous covering (the pericardium). With
forceps, lift the covering, and gently slit it open. Amphibian hearts have 3 chambers. The heart
consists of a single, thick-walled ventricle and two (right and left) anterior, thin-walled atria.
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.
VII.) Urogential System
The urogenital system consists of both the urinary system and the reproductive system.
1. Identify the kidneys, which are long narrow organs lying against the dorsal wall.
2. The bladder is a thin sac attached to the 3. The light stripe lying on the ventral side of
cloaca, it may be difficult to locate. Identify each kidney is the adrenal gland.
the urinary bladder, attached to the ventral
wall of the cloaca. In frogs, urine backs up
into the bladder from the cloaca.
medulla oblongata - controls reflexes like breathing and heart rate cerebellum- controls
balance and muscle coordination optic lobe - vision centre cerebrum - sensations,
movement, behaviour olfactory lobes - smell centre
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.