Science, asked by valeriamen1618, 1 year ago

1) If a frog doesn't chew it's food, what do the positions of it's teeth suggest about how the frog uses them?

2) How do the frog's powerful hind legs help it to fit into a life both in water and on land?

(please answer)

Answers

Answered by vegetavegeto73
0

Answer:

1) If a frog doesn't chew it's food, what do the positions of it's teeth suggest about how the frog uses them?

1.All prey gets swallowed whole, because frogs can't chew. If they have teeth at all, they are usually only on the upper jaw, used for holding onto prey and not for biting or chewing. ... It takes less than a second for a frog's tongue to roll out, adhere to prey, and roll back into the frog's mouth.

2.A frog does not chew its food. What do the positions of its teeth suggest about how the frog uses them? The frogs teeth helps them grip larger prey. The frogs have 4 teeth that are positioned with 2 on the sides and 2 in the center.

2) How do the frog's powerful hind legs help it to fit into a life both in water and on land?

Locomotion. The frog's powerful hind legs are adapted for both swimming and leaping. ... The smaller fore-limbs help to steer when the frog is swimming and absorb the shock of landing after a jump on land. On moving from water to land or over rough ground the frog will crawl rather than leap.

Explanation:

Similar questions