Amphibian
From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amphibians are a group of vertebrate animals. They form the class Amphibia.
They have four legs and are born from eggs. They live in the water as babies, and can go on land when they grow up. Frogs, salamanders, and caecilians are all amphibians.
Amphibians are born without legs, and grow legs as babies. When they grow up, they change shape, or metamorphosize. They eventually lose their gills and tails, and grow front and hind legs. Baby frogs, toads, or salamanders are called tadpoles. They lay as many as 1000 eggs, usually in the water or in wet places. They eat other animals, especially insects.
There are about 5,700 living species of amphibians.
[edit] Taxonomy
- Class Amphibia
- Order Anura (Frogs)
- Order Caudata (Salamanders)
- Order Gymnophiona (Caecilians)
Look up Amphibia in Wikispecies, a directory of species
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Amphibian • Bird • Fish • Mammal • Reptile |