REPTILIA — FROG. 711 



The female is impregnated neither by the mouth, as some philosophers 

 imagine, nor by the excrescence at the thumbs, as was the opinion of Lin- 

 Daeus; but by the inspersion of the male seminal fluid upon the eggs as they 

 proceed from the body. 



A single female produces from six to eleven hundred eggs at a time ; and. 

 in general, she throws them all out together by a single effort ; though some- 

 times she is an hour in performing this task. It is generally in March that 

 she deposits the ova, or spawn. 



When the spawn is emitted and impregnated by the male, it drops to the 

 bottom. The eggs, which during the four first hours suffer no perceptible 

 change, begin then to enlarge and grow lighter ; by which means they 

 mount to the surface of the water. The twenty-first day, the egg is seen to 

 open a little on one side, and the beginning of a tail to peep out, which be- 

 comes more and more distinct every day. The thirty-ninth day, the little 

 animal begins to have motion ; it moves at intervals its tail ; and it is per-: 

 ceived that the liquor in which it is circumfused, serves it for nourishment. 

 In two days more, some of these little creatures fall to the bottom ; while 

 others remain swimming in the fluid round them, Avhile their vivacity and 

 motion is seen to increase. Those which fall %o the bottom remain there 

 the whole day; but having lengthened themselves a little, for hitherto they 

 are doubled up, they mount at intervals to the mucus, which they had quit- 

 ted, and are seen to feed upon it with great vivacity. The next day they 

 acquire their tadpole form. In three days more, they are perceived to have 

 two little fringes, that serve as fins, beneath the head; and these in four 

 days after assume a more perfect form. It is then also that they are seen to 

 feed very greedily upon the pond-weed. When ninety-two days old, two 

 small feet are seen beginning to sprout near the tail; and the head appears 

 to be separate from the body. In five days after this, they refuse all vegeta- 

 ble food ; their mouth appears furnished with teeth ; and their hinder legs 

 are completely formed. In this state it continues for about six or eight 

 hours ; and then the tail dropping off by degrees, the animal appears in its 

 most perfect form. 



Thus the frog, in less than a day, having changed its figure, is seen to 

 change its appetites also. As soon as the animal acquires its perfect state, 

 from having fed upon vegetables it becomes carnivorous, and lives entirely 

 upon worms and insects. But, as the water cannot supply these, it is oblig- 

 ed to quit its native element, and seek for food upon land, where it lives by 

 hunting worms and taking insects by surprise. 



The frog lives for the most part out of the water; but when the cold 

 nights begin to set in, it returns to its native element, always choosing stag- 

 nant waters, where it can lie without danger, concealed at the bottom. In 

 this manner it continues torpid, or with, but very little motion, all the win- 

 ter ; like the rest of the dormant race, it requires no food ; and the circula- 

 tion is slowly carried on, without any assistance from the air. In the 



