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Two thirds of the water in its
entire body is frozen solid most of the year.
Pretty amazing stuff. Especially
considering how cells burst and break causing frostbite once
they freeze.. So how can it be possible for the frog to survive? |
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Frozen FrogsYes. Frogs actually do live in the Arctic! One
very developed frog -- the Wood frog -- has found its way to Alaska, Yukon and the
Northwest Territories. Bear in mind frogs are amphibian, meaning they are unable to produce
body heat, so the wood frog has evolved a rather astonishing method to survive the
ferocious winters.
It freezes alive!
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Hair from most
Arctic,
animals is not white,
but transparent, hollow and
full of air making it
easier for it to
stay warm! |
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It is not
the cells of the wood frogs that freezes, the ice forms in
the spaces between the cells! The organs of the frog are surrounded by a mass of ice
keeping them nice & cool without damaging them. This way the frogs
"hibernate" without any body functions for which it would need energy. There is
no heartbeat, it does not breathe and if you cut into it does not bleed! As the
temperature gets warm in the late spring they recover life! How the freezing is
"controlled" is still a mystery though. This is what you call a highly developed arctic adaptation.
Adaptation basically means "how an animal changes according to the environment it lives
in". Biologists talk about two types of adaptations. One form of adaptation, called
physiological adaptation, involves how one animal can change for example its
behavior or
habits because of sudden change in environment. The other kind of adaptation, discussed
here, happens over many generations and is called evolutionary adaptation.
How does evolutionary adaptation
work? To make a very long story short, evolutionary adaptations are the results of the
competition among animals of the same breed or different breeds over many generations in
response to an ever-changing environment. Certain traits -- certain things about the
animal -- are culled by natural selection, favoring those animals that produce the most
offspring. This is such a broad concept that, theoretically, all the features of any
animal or plant could be considered adaptive. As the guy Charles Darwin - who was the
first to put these thoughts on paper - says himself "..The leaves, trunk, and roots
of a tree all arose by selection and help the individual tree in its competition for
space, soil, and sunlight.." |
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So, how does this apply to Arctic animals? With
the Arctic being such a frigid place to live, there is plenty of competition for food and other
resources and the animals have to be highly adapted in order to survive. In other words,
they need very specialized "gear" just like our team
members.
Lets take a look at the two
cousins - the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and the arctic fox (Alopex lagopus). Generally the
arctic fox lives on the tundra above the tree line
whereas the red fox lives in the forests below the tree line. But lately the red fox, which is the
most prevalent wild mammal on Earth, has tried to move in on his arctic cousins'
territory. |
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The red fox can run faster, is more agile,
bigger and heavier and commonly chases the arctic foxes away whenever they meet, but the
little white fox still greatly outnumbers reds in the Arctic. It all has to do with energy.
Overall, the red fox must use more energy and as such needs more food, because it is not as
well adapted to arctic conditions. Everything about an arctic fox on the other hand
fits perfectly for the arctic. Its feet are covered with fur, its coat is much better and
compared to the red fox it has a much smaller muzzle and small ears reducing its
exposed surface
area, lessening the loss of body heat in the frigid cold! Even before Darwin came around in the early
1800s a biologist named Joel Allen studied and developed a theory on how animals
vary
depending on the climate they live in -- whether it is warm or cold. This is also called a
climatic adaptation.
Biologist Joel Allan developed a famous
theory to explain how animals conserve heat. It goes like this: animals from cold climates have
smaller ears, muzzles, legs and tails than their relatives from warmer climates. Does it
sound familiar!
The arctic hare is another
excellent example of the "Allen rule". An arctic hare living in Northern
Greenland for instance has shorter ears, snout and legs than one living in Labrador about
3700 (6000 km) miles further south. |
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TIPS & THOUGHTS...
Why do you
think the skin of a polar bear is black?? Find the answer in the Zebra
section. Do you know how your body stays warm? Read more in Granola
Bars. To check out what frostbites really are, go to: Wind
chill
& Frostbite. |

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© Photos copyright by Gordon Wiltsie, Paul Pregont, Henrik Larsen |

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