xin PHYLUM CHOEPATA 27:3 



ORDER 2. ANURA. 



Amphibia having no tail in the adult condition. The trunk is 

 short and broad, and the hind-limbs greatly exceed the fore-limbs 

 in size. Gills and gill-slits are never present in the adult. 



Including the Frogs and Toads. 



ORDER 3. GYMNOPHIONA. 



Snake-like Amphibia having neither limbs nor tail. A dermal 

 exoskeleton is present. There are no gills or gill-slits in the 

 adult. 



Including the Csecilians (Ccecilia, Epicrium, &c.). 



ORDER 4. STEGOCEPHALL 



Extinct tailed Amphibia, often of great size, having usually 

 two pairs of limbs and a well-developed dermal exoskeleton. 

 The group ranges from the Permian to the Trias. 



Systematic Position of the Example. 



The genus Rana belongs to the family Ranidcc, which with 

 three other families constitutes the series Firmisternia, of the 

 sub-order PJianeroglossa, and order Anura. 



The absence of a tail and the presence of two pairs of limbs, of 

 which the posterior are larger than the anterior, place the genus 

 among the Anura. The presence of a tongue and of distinct 

 paired Eustachian tubes separates the Phaneroglossa from the 

 Aglossa (Pipa and Xenopus), a small group of Toads in which the 

 tongue is absent and the Eustachian tubes have a common median 

 opening. The Firmisternia are distinguished by having the 

 coracoids joined by a common epicoracoid cartilage in contra- 

 distinction from the Arcifera (Tree-frogs, Toads, &c.) 3 in which the 

 epicoracoids overlap one another. The RanidaB are distinguished 

 from the other families of Firmisternia by having teeth in the 

 upper jaw and the transverse processes of the sacral vertebrae not 

 dilated. R. temporaria is distinguished from R. esculenta by its 

 smaller size and brown colour, by the large black patch in the 

 tympanic region, and by the absence of external vocal sacs in the 

 male. 



3. GENERAL ORGANISATION. 



The Amphibia are specially interesting as illustrating the 

 transition from the water-breathing to the air-breathing type of 

 Craniate structure. The lower forms retain their gills throughout 

 life, but possess lungs in addition : in the higher the gills occur 

 only in the larval state, and the adult breathes exclusively by the 

 lungs and skin, becoming transformed from an aquatic into a 



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