Puneet Varma (Editor)

Myobatrachidae

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Anura

Superfamily
  
Bufonoidea

Higher classification
  
Frog

Phylum
  
Chordata

Suborder
  
Neobatrachia

Scientific name
  
Myobatrachidae

Rank
  
Family

Myobatrachidae Myobatrachidae Australian froglets Wildlife Journal Junior

Lower classifications
  
Pseudophryne, Crinia, Gastric‑brooding frog, Uperoleia, Barred frogs

The Myobatrachidae (commonly known as the Australian ground frogs) are a family of frogs found in Australia and New Guinea. Members of this family vary greatly in size, from species less than 1.5 cm (0.59 in) long, to the second-largest frog in Australia, the giant barred frog (Mixophyes iteratus), at 12 cm (4.7 in) in length. The entire family is either terrestrial or aquatic frogs, with no arboreal species.

Contents

Myobatrachidae Flickriver teejaybee39s photos tagged with myobatrachidae

Characteristics

Myobatrachidae Photos of Australian ground frogs family Myobatrachidae

The Myobatrachidae family contains forms of parental care unique in the animal kingdom. The two species of gastric-brooding frog (genus: Rheobatrachus), are found in this family. The females of these species swallow their young, where they develop until metamorphosis. The pouched frog (Assa darlingtoni) has pouches on the sides of its body. The male will guard the eggs until hatching, and assist the tadpoles into its side, where they stay until metamorphosis. Another form of parental care, although not unique, is found in many species of the genus Limnodynastes, where the male buries himself near an egg mass, and protects the eggs.

Myobatrachidae Myobatrachidae Merritt College Herpetology

While many species are adapted to burrowing, helping them survive in semiarid or seasonally arid environments, the turtle frog and sandhill frog go so far as to lay their eggs directly into moist sand several feet below the surface, rather than into water. These species lack tadpoles, with the eggs hatching directly into miniature frogs.

Myobatrachidae amphibiaweborglistsfaminfoimagesmyobatrachida

These frogs lack adhesive toe discs found in the tree frogs. The family is broken into subfamilies based mainly upon their egg-laying habits. Those of the subfamily Limnodynastinae lay foam nests. The female creates foam by agitating a chemical on her skin with her hands. The foam may float on top of water, or be on land. The subfamily Rheobatrachinae contains the two species of gastric-brooding frogs, and the rest are within the subfamily Myobatrachinae.

Taxonomy

The myobatrachids are split into three subfamilies: Myobatrachinae, Limnodynastinae, and Rheobatrachinae. Although most sources class the three groups as subfamilies, some taxonomists recognise them as individual families.

References

Myobatrachidae Wikipedia