Amphibian
Amphibian
Amphibian
About 2,500 extant species of three divergent groups—frogs and toads, salamanders, and caecilians
are included in Amphibia.
3. Typically, two pairs of limbs, no paired fins. Forelimbs with four and hind limbs with five
clawless digits.
6. Heart 3-chambered; two atria (auricles) and one ventricle; two other chambers— sinus venosus
and conus arteriosus, present.
8. Tympanum present; a rod-like collumela connects the tympanum and inner ear.
9. Eggs with gelatinous coverings, usually laid in water. Larvae usually aquatic.
1. Apsidospondyli and
2. Lepospondyli.
The central of vertebrae formed from cartilage blocks in units of two, which are ossified in varying
degrees as anterior intercentra and posterior pleurocentra.
1. The cross section of the teeth exhibits a prominent radiating in-folding of the enamel surface,
hence the name.
Order 1. Ichthyostegalia:
The’ earliest known amphibians, perhaps the nearest to true prototetrapods, were prevalent from
upper Devonian to upper Carboniferous.
i. A preopercular and possibly subopercular persisted on the back of squamosal and quadratojugal
bones.
ii. The septomaxilla formed part of the dermal covering of the skull.
iii. Like Dipnoi and some early crossopterygians, the nose bears a pit on the under-side of the skull,
bridged by a process of the maxilla and divided into anterior and posterior part.
Order 2. Rhachitomi:
Typical labyrinthodonts flourished during the Permian and Triassic, became subsequently extinct.
1. About 150 cm long with short powerful legs and five toes.
2. Large depressed skull with large inter-pterygoid cavities and otic notch.
3. The rhachitomous vertebrae had a semilunar wedge-like inter-centrum and one or two posterior
pleurocentra in addition to a vertical neural arch.
Example: Eryops .
Order 3. Stereospondyli:
Transitional types arose from rhachitome stock, lived in the early Triassic waters, became extinct
towards the end of Triassic.
2. Vertebrae with pleurocentra removed, the intercentra joining almost the whole structure.
3. Skull flattened, ossification much reduced, except in the exoccipitals, which formed a double
condyle.
4. Para sphenoid highly developed and apparently had firm union with pterygoids.
Order 4. Embolomeri:
Fish-like labyrinthodonts appeared in the Carboniferous, became abundant during the Pennian and
extinct at the end of Triassic. Some were superficially crocodile-like.
1. The teeth had the dentine in-folded at the base into labyrinthine grooves.
2. The vertebrae were embolomerous, consisting of a neural arch resting on two notochordal centra
—an anterior inter-centrum and a posterior pleurocentrum.
4. The pelvic girdle not directly attached to the vertebral column but held in place by ligament.
Order 5. Seymouriamorpha:
The group represents a stem apparently developed astride the transition line between Amphibia and
Reptilia at the lower Permian.
1. Head relatively small, pointed; dorsal nostrils; a comparatively thick body and a short tail.
2. All its limbs were pentadactyl, short, muscular and thrust from the midline.
6. The ilium was dorsally expanded for attachment of strong walking muscles.
Example: Seymouria
1. Tailless frogs and toads with short and broad bodies and long hindlimbs.
Order 1. Eoanura:
1. These are “dawn frogs”—ancestral to the modern frogs and were prominent in upper
Carboniferous.
Order 2. Proanura:
3. The postcranial skeleton, including caudal vertebrae, was not otherwise anuran; the ilia were
elongated
Example: Protobatrachus.
Tailless modern toads and frogs with more than 2,200 extant species arranged in ten families;
1. These are small late Palaeozoic amphibians, ranging from a few inches to a few feet in size.
2. The- vertebrae lepospondylous, i.e., centra formed directly of bone around notochord, not
preceded by cartilage.
Small sized, body snake-like with as many as 100 vertebrae and with forked ribs, found in
Carboniferous deposits.
Example: Ophiderpeton.
Order 2. Nectridia:
1. One type was superficially snake-like, limbless and another type with small limbs – and a
flattened skull, occurred in the Upper Carboniferous.
2. The skull bore an extraordinary armament formed by the outgrowth of the tabulars.
1. Permian urodeles but retained too many labyrinthodont features to be closely related to caudata.
3. Skull incompletely roofed; circumorbital bones lost, which left the orbit open below.
Example: Lysorophus.
Order 4. Phyllospondyli:
1. The broad, heavily roofed skull with a highly diagrammatic arrangement of the investing bones.
Example: Brafichiosaurus.
1. Newts and salamanders; degenerate animals with a determinable ancestry from the Cretaceous
period. More than 250 species are existing today.
1. Aberrant, blind, worm-like, limbless, tropical amphibians with a very short tail and intromittant
organ in the male.
3. The body is usually grooved transversely, and in the grooves are often series of minute scales, a
legacy from carboniferous ancestors.
The first major groups of amphibians developed in the Devonian period, around 370 million
years ago, from lobe-finned fish which were similar to the modern coelacanth and lungfish.
These ancient lobe-finned fish had evolved multi-jointed leg-like fins with digits that enabled
them to crawl along the sea bottom. Some fish had developed primitive lungs that help them
breathe air when the stagnant pools of the Devonian swamps were low in oxygen. They could
also use their strong fins to hoist themselves out of the water and onto dry land if circumstances
so required. Eventually, their bony fins would evolve into limbs and they would become the
ancestors to all tetrapods, including modern amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Despite
being able to crawl on land, many of these prehistoric tetrapodomorph fish still spent most of
their time in the water. They had started to develop lungs, but still breathed predominantly with
gills.
Examples
Many examples of species showing transitional features have been discovered. Ichthyostega was
one of the first primitive amphibians, with nostrils and more efficient lungs. It had four sturdy
limbs, a neck, a tail with fins and a skull very similar to that of the lobe-finned
fish, Eusthenopteron. Amphibians evolved adaptations that allowed them to stay out of the water
for longer periods. Their lungs improved and their skeletons became heavier and stronger, better
able to support the weight of their bodies on land. They developed "hands" and "feet" with five
or more digits the skin became more capable of retaining body fluids and resisting
desiccation. The fish's hyomandibula bone in the hyoid region behind the gills diminished in size
and became the stapes of the amphibian ear, an adaptation necessary for hearing on dry land. An
affinity between the amphibians and the teleost fish is the multi-folded structure of the teeth and
the paired supra-occipital bones at the back of the head, neither of these features being found
elsewhere in the animal kingdom