is to assist in breathing as grown frogs do not have gillshelps air flow to the lungs (used as an air way)It most likely helps a frog breathe because the do not have gills when they are grown!
frogs heart has five chambers namely. 1-Sinus Venosus =Thin walled 2-Right auricle =Thin walled 3-Left auricle =Thin walled 4-Ventricle =Thin walled and muscular 5-Truncus arteriosus =Tabular thick walled
Fat Bodies Liver Small and Large intestine Oviduct Gall Bladder Stomach Pancreas Rectum Heart Conus/Truncus Arteriosus Larynx Lungs Postcaval Vein Ovary Spleen Kidney Adrenal GL. Testes
The conus arteriosus is a single, wide arterial vessel leaving the ventricle and passing ventrally over the right atrium.
It is for your mom
A frog's ventricle pumps blood out of the heart through its body. Our left ventricle does the same thingto pump out blood.
the function of a frog is to help it jump around
The three major types of blood vessels: 1. Arteries - carry blood away from the heart 2. Capillaries - connects arteries to veins. ( Exchange of gases takes place in capillaries. ) 3. Veins - carries non-oxygenated blood to the heart
So the Frog has the ability to see
the same as it is in humansits the control center of the frog, frog's still have to make decisions
The frog heart differs from the mammalian heart anatomically in that they are three chambered rather than four chambered. The pacemaker in the amphibian heart is the sinus venosus, a thin-walled sac that receives blood from the anterior and posterior caval veins and empties blood into the right atrium. The single ventricle receives blood from both atria and pumps blood out through the large artery called the truncus arteriosus (Figure 1). In contrast, the mammalian ventricle has separate left and right chambers, which prevent mixing of the venous and arterial blood.
To carry oxygen to the frog's body cells.