Latest News

Recent Comments

shnize said "It didn't look like he was wearing a man bra to me..." in Science, Man Boobs and Harrison Ford

jamesblake said "Oh! really it's an exciting game to play and enjoy..." in Play WTF?!, a Brilliant World of Warcraft Spoof

jfoiwpo said "Sorry, double post, someone should delete it." in 10 Things That Suck About Metal Gear Solid 4

jfoiwpo said "Damn jaype999! I laughed so hard at your post, I t..." in 10 Things That Suck About Metal Gear Solid 4

jfoiwpo said "Damn jaype999! I laughed so hard at your post, I t..." in 10 Things That Suck About Metal Gear Solid 4

jaype999 said "hey jfoiwpo what can i say..you're obviously a fai..." in 10 Things That Suck About Metal Gear Solid 4

cp said "You recived some attention on this issue! See Atta..." in Particle Accelerator Will Destroy Earth, Claims Lawsuit

Addicting Sites

You're viewing posts tagged borneo

30-Year Search Finally Locates Lungless Frog

Posted by Chris Jensen | Apr. 07, 2008 09:46AM PST | 346 views | 2 comments

FILED UNDER: News. Science.

After 30 years of searching, researchers in Borneo have finally located a lungless frog.  The aquatic frog, known by the easy-to-say name Barbourula Kalimantanensis, receives all of its oxygen through its skin.

Of all tetrapods (animals with four limbs), lunglessness is only known to occur in amphibians. There are many lungless salamanders and a single species of caecilian, a limbless amphibian resembling an earthworm, known to science. Nevertheless, Bickford said, the complete loss of lungs is a particularly rare evolutionary event that has probably only occurred three times.

The discovery of lunglessness in a secretive Bornean frog supports the idea that lungs are a malleable trait in amphibians, which represent the evolutionary sister group to all other tetrapods, according to the researchers. Barboroula kalimantanensis lives in cold, fast-flowing water, they noted, so loss of lungs might be an adaptation to a combination of factors: a higher oxygen environment, the species’s presumed low metabolic rate, severe flattening of their bodies that increases the surface area of their skin, and selection for negative buoyancy—meaning that the frogs would rather sink than float.

Read More (Source: EurekaAlert)

Tags research, frog, indonesia, borneo