Biology, Frog Dissection Formal Lab Report 

Background: In the Biology class I took this year, we have to write a formal lab report every quarter. Formal Lab Reports usually take about 4-6 hours to complete not including time taken to perform the experiment. For the last quarter of the school year, we had to do a lot of dissections. The formal lab report for this quarter was on the frog I dissected. Take note, this lab report does not have anything gory about it but if you found dissecting animals in high school (if you are past high school) or if you think it is just gross then possibly read with caution. I hope you enjoy learning all about frogs!

Title: Frog Internal and External Anatomy Dissection

Name: Karibella Whitmore

Date: 5/7/2024

Purpose:  To locate and understand a common grass frog’s external features and internal organs.

Background:  

Frogs are some of the most interesting amphibians in the world. They breathe through their skin and can hibernate in cold weather! Frogs play an important part in their ecosystems.  They are good food for fish, birds, and snakes, and they also help control bug populations by eating bugs.  

The frog specimen that was dissected was from Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Chordata, Class Amphibia, Order Anura, Family Ranidaem, Genus Rana, and Species Forreri.  

Rana Forreri was discovered by Edward Drinker Cope. Cope was a famous paleontologist who also spent a lot of time studying reptiles and amphibians and tagging new species. William H. Forrer, a naturalist and collector, provided most of the information for Cope to name Rana Forreri. Rana Forreri is named after William H. Forrer.  Forrer collaborated with many famous scientists, providing them with specimens for their taxonomy work.  

Karen Lips is a professor of Biology at the University of Maryland.  She greatly contributed to the discovery of chytrid fungus, which uses frog skin to reproduce.  Many years ago, she lived in a jungle and studied the growth and reproduction of frogs.  She returned to the States to publish her findings but had to go back to the jungle for one more experiment.  When she returned to the jungle, all the frogs had disappeared.  She went to a different location in Panama to study more frogs, and while she was there, all the frogs began to get sick and die.  She sent some off to a lab, and a skin infection was found but was not identified.  The New York Times published a photo of the infection, and people in Australia and people from the Washington DC Zoo helped identify it as a fungus.  More research was conducted, and it was found to be Chytrid Fungus.  Karen Lips helped identify this fungus that is killing off frogs around the world.  

Another scientist who has been studying sick frogs is Tyrone Hayes. Hayes majored in Biology at Harvard and was hired to study the effects of the herbicide Atrazine on frogs. His research found that atrazine inhibited the growth of the larynx in male frogs. More research found that the male frogs exposed to the atrazine developed female gonads and eggs and were able to fertilize them. The male frogs still had male gonads but were unable to fertilize eggs.  His discoveries have led to much controversy about atrazine and its effects on wildlife, ecosystems, and even humans.    

Experimental Procedure:  

I.  Materials:  

  • Dissection Tray
  • Dissection Scissors
  • Forceps
  • Scalpal
  • Two Dissection Probes
  • Plastic Exam Gloves
  • Dissection Pins
  • Frog Specimen
  • Face Mask (optional)
  • Eye Glasses (optional)

II. Safety Precautions:  

Be careful when cutting with scissors and scalpel.  Use precaution when moving pins.  Do not inhale or eat frog specimens.  Sharp tools should be kept away from children.  

III. Procedure:

  1. Make an incision with the dissection scissors starting at the anus on the ventral side and continuing to the area just below the shoulders.
  2. Make two identical incisions or the anterior side of the original incision running right to left.  Repeat on the posterior end of the original incision.  You should be able to pull back flaps of skin to see the internal organs.  If needed, gently cut away tissue holding the skin to the organs with a scalpel.
  3. If your frog is female, remove all the eggs to expose the internal organs. The eggs are small black-and-white dots.  
  4. Examine the internal organs and attempt to locate the heart, stomach, lungs, intestines, gonads, and other major organs.  
  5. Using the scissors, make an incision in the side of the stomach to see what the frog’s last meal was.  Frogs eat their food whole so you might be able to identify what is inside the stomach.
  6. To see the muscle in the frog’s leg, carefully make an incision starting near the anus and the original incision.  Gently cut only the skin and pull open the incision to see the muscles.  
  7. Once you are finished examining the frog, dispose of all organs and frog parts in a safe plastic bag.  
  8. Wash dissection tools and put them away for your next dissection.   

Data/Results:  

Data: (Must include 2 hand-drawn labeled diagrams of the specimen:  one external feature, one internal organ)

Discussion:  Explain the functions of features and organs you observed in the specimen. 

This experiment aimed to identify and find a frog’s internal organs and observe and identify the external features.  Inside the frog specimen, the heart, veins, arteries, intestine, stomach, gonads, eggs, muscles, and lungs were all observed.  The frog heart has three chambers and is used to circulate blood around the body.  It is connected to the rest of the body by veins arteries, and capillaries.  The frog has a closed circulatory system.  

The lungs are part of the respiratory system and help the frog breathe.  The skin and mouth also aid in the oxygenation of the frog’s blood.  The frog uses its skin to breathe during hibernation because it usually hibernates in mud.  

The intestine and stomach are part of the digestive system.  The stomach digests food and stores it, and the intestine further digests the food and secretes any waste through the anus.  

The gonads are part of the reproductive system and were female in this frog.  The eggs are undeveloped baby frogs that were not yet fertilized.  The muscles help the frog to move in various ways, whether jumping or swimming.  All these organs help the frog to live well and thrive.  

Conclusion:  Summarize the key things you learned about your specimen.

This experiment aimed to learn more about and identify the internal organs and external features of a frog. The most important things learned from this dissection were the internal anatomy of the frog, its role in the world, and that frogs eat their food whole, which provided a very interesting surprise for those dissecting.  Most of the internal organs were found and recorded, and all of the external features were found.  The student learned the importance of precision and carefulness while dissecting.  The student also learned that female frogs usually have very many eggs.  This dissection was a challenging and fun activity for a biology student and will hopefully be repeated by many biology students in the future!

Photo/Video:   Include a photo of you with your specimen.

References:  

Flynt, Sean. “Biologist Warns of Health Effects of Common Herbicide.” Samford University, 11 Apr. 2018, www.samford.edu/news/2018/04/Biologist-Warns-of-Health-Effects-of-Common-Herbicide.

“Lithobates Forreri (Boulenger, 1883) | Amphibian Species of the World.” Amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org, 10 May 2024, amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org/Amphibia/Anura/Ranidae/Lithobates/Lithobates-forreri. Accessed 10 May 2024.

Schlecht, Volker, et al. “Video: Opinion | the Waiting.” The New York Times, 12 Dec. 2023, www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/100000009184500/the-waiting.html. Accessed 10 May 2024.

—. “Video: Opinion | the Waiting.” The New York Times, 12 Dec. 2023, www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/100000009184500/the-waiting.html. Accessed 10 May 2024.

Robinson, Roosevelt. “Nature’s Frogs.” Alabama Cooperative Extension System, 10 Apr. 2023, 

www.aces.edu/blog/topics/urban-extension/natures-frogs/#:~:text=Frogs%20are%20an%20integral%20part.

Formal Dissection Report Checklist

Check off each item under each category to verify you’ve included the information.

Background

  • checkedTopic Sentence
  • checkedIntroduced and explained the classification of your specimen.
  • checkedResearched three scientists who have contributed to our understanding of the specimen.  
    • checkedWho discovered it and how did they learn about how the specimen fits into the ecosystem?
    • checkedWhich scientists throughout history have added or changed our understanding of the specimen, experiments they performed and their conclusions.
    • checkedWhich scientist(s) used the specimen to further our understanding in various fields (medicine, space, sports, etc.) today and how are they applying it?
  • checkedNo personal pronouns.
  • checkedUsed complete sentences and correct grammar.
  • checkedUsed paragraph format.

Experimental Procedures

  • checkedListed materials (not in sentences)
  • checkedListed safety precautions (if any)
  • checkedListed Procedures 
    • checkedUsed my own words
    • checkedWrote steps as a numbered list, not a paragraph.
    • checked Clearly written so can be duplicated.

Data/Results

  • checked I included a labeled hand drawn diagram of the external features of the organism.
  • checked I included a labeled hand drawn diagram of the internal organs of the organism.
  • checkedMy labeled diagrams are clearly labeled and easy to read.
  • checkedMy labels are horizontal and straight.

Discussion

  • checkedRestated purpose.
  • checkedDiscussed the purpose and functions of the external features observed.  
  • checkedDiscussed the purpose and functions of the organs observed.  
  • checkedDiscussed how the organs are connected within a system.
  • checkedDiscussed how the systems are connected to each other.

Conclusion

  • checked Restated purpose in one sentence.
  • checked Summarized the key points/lessons learned about the specimen from doing this dissection.
  • checked Included how the specimen fits into its ecosystem.

Photo

  • checkedIncluded a photo with me included in the picture.

References

  • checked  Used the correct format to list sources, APA, or MLA format.
  • checked  Avoided summary sources (Textbooks, encyclopedias, Wikipedia, how stuff works, khan academy, etc.)
  • checked  Used websites that present detailed information, like college sites, research sites, sites dedicated to the topic.

What Are Small, Cute, Sharp and Fluffy?

So three years ago for a random school project that I do not recall, we had to raise chickens. Baby ones. Me and my little brother raised four chickens named Dusty, Sorbet, Whitey and Hazel. Once they were bigger they were sent to live with our friends and since then Whitey was sadly wiped out by her fellow chickens. (The other chickens were cannibals)

A few days ago, our friend (Tiffany, who takes care of Dusty Sorbet and Hazel) came over after her farmers markets and we were all talking and she mentioned that she wanted to get more chickens. My mom offered for us to raise the chicks until school ends and two hours later we had to baby chickens sitting in our garage. We had all the previous supplies from raising the first batch of chickens so we were ready for these ones.

Currently there are only two chicks, named Hestia and Oreo (My brothers chose the names) but on thursday we get two more and me and my sister get to name them. The new ones are going to be Easter Eggers which make really colorful eggs!


What the Pheasant Said

I interviewed a pheasant named Albert Meat. He and the most honorable profession of first-class pheasant flyer. Of course, being a bird he did not know that really he was, every day taken out to be turned into bacon-wrapped pheasant bites. He had an interesting view on pheasant hunting. His way of thinking of it is much more….. hopeful.

Me: “What does your job require you to do?”
Mr. Meat: “Well, each day I sit in a tower and people pick me up and toss me out into the wide world full of whizzing leaves. I fly through the air dodging the leaves and I fly to my roost where I have a feast and sleep till the next day. Although, every time, lots of my colleagues fall to the ground after being struck by the whizzing leaves, but every time, I make it back to the roost. “


Me: “So do you know why your colleagues fall to the ground when they, well when they are hit by, uh, whizzing leaves?”
Mr. Meat: “Yes, there are humans with the leaf shooters on the ground and they have dogs to find my fallen colleagues when they leave the flock. The dogs then transport them to the Lovely Land of Eternal Feasts.”


Me: “Ok, so, um, have you ever had friends fall to the dogs?”
Mr. Meat: “Yes, one day me and Phil were taken out together but he fell. He was so lucky. *nods head* The old, wise, Mr. Living who has survived years of flights, said that the humans are taking us to the tower to be turned into easy game for hunters, but clearly he is crazy. The Humans here are just too nice to kill us like that. They let us have fun flying and randomly select us to go to the Lovely Land of Eternal Feasts and I can hardly wait until I am selected.”

Me: “Well, there are easier ways to go to the, um, Lovely Land of Eternal Feasts.” Mr. Meat: “You must tell me, I have waited too long for my eternal feast!”

Me: “Tomorrow, fly towards the leaf shooters.”

How Brother Fox Caught Brother Rabbit

In this post I will tell a story that I read for my school subject, Writing and Rhetoric. At the end I wrote an adventure that Brer Fox and Brer Rabbit go on with another friend. Please keep in mind while reading that animals don’t talk but it is a fable and animals don’t go fishing. It is a fable and you must go along with it.

How Brer Fox Caught Brer Rabbit

Note: Brer is a contraction of the word brother. Also I am citing the next 12 paragraphs from chapter 7 of Writing and Rhetoric book 5.

One hot summer day in the South, Brer Fox actualy did catch Brer Rabbit. He got some tar and mixed it with some turpentine and shaped it into a figure about the site of a fat baby. Brer Fox took this Tar Baby and set him in the middle of the big road. Then he hid in the bushes to see what would happen.

Well, he didn’t have to wait long. Down the road came Brer Rabbit lippity-dipity, dippity lippity – just as sasy as a jaybird. Brer Fox lay low and Brer Rabbit came prancing along until he spied the Tar Baby, just sitting there.

“Good morning!” said Brer Rabbit. “Nice weather this morning.” The Tar Baby didn’t say anything, and Brer Fox lay low.

“How are you doing today?” asked Brer Rabbit. Brer Fox, he winked his eye slow, and lay low, and the Tar Baby didn’t say a word.

“How you come on, then? Are you deaf?” demanded Brer Rabbit. “Cause if you’re deaf l can always holler louder. HOWDY, I SAY! The Tar Baby stayed still, and Brer Fox, he lay low.

“You’re stuck up, that’s what you are!” cried Brer Rabbit. “And I’m going to cure you, that’s what I’m going to do!”

Brer Fox, he sort of chuckled in his stomach, but the Tar Baby didn’t say anything. “I’m going to teach you how to talk to respectable folks if it’s my last act!” Shouted Brer Rabbit. “If you don’t take off that hat and tell me howdy, I’m gonna bust you wide open!” Well, that Tar Baby stayed perfectly still, and Brer Fox lay low.

Brer Rabbit kept asking questions and the Tar Baby kept on saying nothing. Presently, Brer Rabbit drew back his fist and hit the Tar Baby up the side of its head. Right there is where he got into trouble. His fist got stuck and he couldn’t pull it loose.

The tar held him fast. But the Tar Baby sat still and Brer Fox lay low. “If you don’t lemme loose, I’ll knock you again!” cried Brer Rabbit. With that, he fetched the Baby another swipe with the other fist and that stuck too. The Tar Baby didn’t say a word and Brer Fox lay low.

“Turn me loose! Turn me loose before I knock the stuffing out of you!” shouted Brer Rabbit, but the Tar Baby didn’t say anything. It just held on while Brer Rabbit kicked. He lost the use of his feet this way. Brer Fox just lay low, chuckling to himself.

Then Brer Rabbit started squalling and saying, “If you don’t turn me loose I’ll butt you with my head! So he butted, and his head and that got stuck too. Then Fox sauntered forth looking as innocent as one of your mother’s mockingbirds.

“Howdy, Brer Rabbit,” Brer Fox said. “You look sort of stuck up this morning.” And then he rolled on the ground and laughed til he couldn’t laugh anymore. “I expect you’ll take dinner with me this time, Brer Rabbit. I’ve laid in some calamus root, and I’m not gonna take any excuse this time.”

Completely my opinion

As you can see the caricatures in this story are not exactly virtuous. Fox is clearly trying to catch Rabbit to eat him. Rabbit is portrayed as a gentlemen at first but he quickly loses his temper. This story was written by Enid Blyton. The version I used was an adaptation by Joel Chandler Harris. Note: This paragraph and beyond are my own work.

Refutation

This Refutation is about the story How Brother Fox Caught Bro Rabbit Adapted by Joel Chandler Harris. The parts of the story that are improbable and improper are when Rabbit thinks the tar baby is real and alive. An Unclear part is how Fox was able to make and shape the Tar Baby without getting himself stuck. The Improper part is Rabbit Punching, Kicking, and head butting the Tar baby.

At the start of the story Fox is crafting a tar baby that he puts in the road. Rabbit comes along and greets the baby. Being made of tar the baby did not respond. Rabbit quickly got very flustered at this and became angry enough to punch the baby. He got stuck (duh) and was even angrier. He punched and kicked the baby until he was fully stuck then finished it off with a grand finale of Head Butting the baby and getting completely stuck. Fox came out and shrewdly asked Rabbit if he would join him for dinner.

It is completly unbelivable that Rabbit would be stupid enaugh to think that the Baby was alive. It is also Improper that Fox was trying to catch and eat Rabbit. Even though fox’s intentions were not pointed out it is clear what he is trying to do. Since the animals behave like humans lets think about this story as if the charactures are human. Fox would be cannibalist and Rabbit would be put in jail for beating up another.

The author intended to write a childrens story but it (in my opinion) it turned out to be a improper fable. However if you are looking at the fable from a non critical mind you would see it as a funny life lesson. I only had to think about how to criticize it for my school assignment which I am more than happy to do.

Bro Fox, Bro Rabbit and Bro Bear go fishing

Situation: Brer Fox, Brer Rabbit and Brer bear decide to go fishing together. They walk to a nearby lake. They all want to catch the biggest and most fish.

Brer Bear: “Good morning Fox, Rabbit. How are you this fine morning? For your information I am quite well for I plan to catch the biggest fish today.”

Brer Rabbit: “The biggest fish!? How could a silly fool like you catch the biggest fish amongst us? Thats a ridiculous notion! Im going to catch the biggest fish today!”

Brer Fox: “Ha! Neither of you could come near catching anything! Brer bear is too stupid and Brer Rabbit, your Far to small to even use an oar! Im going to catch the biggest fish today!”

Brer Rabbit: “Okay since i am the only one here with any brains, I propose we have a contest and whoever wins gets to eat the others!” Note: I am sticking with the theme of the previous story. 🙂

Brer Fox: “Thats fine with me, for I know both of you will be delicious and you are to stupid to win!”

(Brer Rabbit said to Brer Bear “ Do you think if he eats us then he will become fat and stupid?”)

Brer Bear: Thats all fine by me because both of you clearly don’t have any brawn, let alone enough to haul a big fish.”

All three said “Let the Contest Begin!”

Narrarator: Brer Fox, Brer Rabbit, and Bro Bear all went to different spots on the lake and began to fish. Little did they know that all of their boats were slowly drifting to the deepest part of the lake. Fox looked up from his fishing and shouted

“ Hey you! Don’t drift so near to me, you’ll catch onto my line!”

At this the other two looekd up and realized their positons. All three fishers paddled away from each other. Then out of the blue Brer Bear shouted,

“I’ve got one, I’ve got a big, huge one!”

Then Fox shouted,

“I have one too! A ginormous one!”

At this Rabbits blood turned to ice. Only for a moment though because he felt a sudden, hard tug on his line! He too then exclaimed with joy his find.

Brer Rabbit: “I’ve got one, a huge Colossal one!”

Then all three Cotten Headed ninny Muggins started reeling in their lines but as they were, somehow, without them noticing, all three boats were quickly “drifting” toward each other.

Within seconds the three boats crashed together and capsized. A few seconds later all three fishers came spluttering to the surface and in realizing their folly they all swam to the shore and walked home in shame.

Alternate ending: Within seconds the three boats crashed together and rapidly sank below the surface. Bear, Fox and Rabbit were never seen again and there was never any quarrels of disruptions in Animal Oppidum Loquentes.