Fig. 52.–Rana esculenta. Male with inflated external vocal sacs. × 1.

The length of life which these frogs can attain is quite unknown. They do not reach maturity until the fourth or fifth year, but this is long before they stop growing, and it is no exaggeration to say that few, if any, frogs die of old age, since they have so many enemies. The stork is their king in the fable, and his daily visits to his realm strike dire distress amongst his subjects, which soon learn to know his conspicuous white and black garb, and seek imperfect safety at the bottom of shallow ponds and ditches, not too deep for the long-legged and long-billed despot. Numbers are taken by birds of prey; snakes and tortoises hunt them up in the water, and they are good bait for pike and other voracious fishes. The specific name esculenta needs no comment, and this species is as much a martyr to science as the brown Grass-frog. The destroyers of tadpoles and young frogs are unlimited. In their turn the frogs themselves, especially the old ones, are very rapacious, and eat any living creature they can master,–insects, worms and snails, other frogs, especially the brown kind, and the young brood of fishes.

Recently caught Water-frogs are wild beyond description, much more so than the Grass-frog, but even they calm down after some time, learn to know their keeper, and allow him to handle them without trying to commit suicide by jumping on to, into, and down anything. However, they do not thrive well in captivity, and it is rare that they can be induced to breed, unless their enforced new home affords them ample freedom, and plenty of water and fresh air.

The Water-frogs appear in Germany rather late in the year, not before the middle of April, first the younger, then the adult members. In Southern Europe they show themselves earlier, and still further south they do not hibernate at all. The breeding season begins in Germany towards the end of May and continues well into June, the var. ridibunda beginning mostly a fortnight earlier. The male clasps the female under the arms, throwing its own round her breast, the nuptial grey excrescences on his inner fingers pressing against her skin, the palms being turned outwards. The embrace does not last long, rarely extending over a few days. The eggs, to the astonishing number of 5000 to 10,000 in full-grown specimens, are expelled in several masses, which sink down and remain at the bottom. The eggs measure only 1.5 mm. and are yellowish-grey above, pale yellow below; their gelatinous cover swells to 7-8 mm. in width. The embryo escapes on the fifth or sixth day as a very small larva, in which, however, the mouth, eyes, and beginnings of the external gills are already discernible. At the age of two weeks the gills have shrunk away, the left-sided "spiracle" is completed, and the well-tailed tadpoles, olive brown above, yellowish white below, still hang with their suckers on to plants and stones, or lie at the bottom, nibbling away at any rotting animal matter or scraping off the green algae.

It may here be mentioned that small tadpoles of any kind can with advantage be used as cleaners of delicate and small skeletons. The object is put into a vessel, and the tadpoles will soon nibble and rasp away all the edible portions, leaving the skeletal framework beautifully cleaned. But they require attention lest they rasp away the cartilage.

The tadpole stage lasts three to four months; but cold, absence of sunshine, and scarcity of food delay the metamorphosis well into the end of summer, or force them to hibernate in the unfinished condition. They are very gregarious, and when the tadpoles of several families combine, they make imposing shows. By the time that their hind-limbs begin to sprout, they frequently combine into large shoals, and instead of always feeding they swim about in their tens of thousands, all moving in the same direction, and making almost regular evolutions. Mill-ponds with steep banks are good places for watching these peculiar habits. The tadpoles reach a considerable size, the total length averaging 2½ inches, or some 60 mm. the tail taking up ⅔ of the whole length. Specimens which measure more than 3 inches are rare. The baby-frogs hop on land while still provided with a stumpy tail; when this is resorbed the little creature is scarcely half-an-inch long, and for the rest of the available season leads a rather more terrestrial life than ever after.

Ex Africa semper aliquid novi! Quite recently Boulenger has received a consignment of Anura from the French Congo, amongst which were several new, remarkable genera, notably Trichobatrachus and Gampsosteonyx. Both are true Ranidae. Pupil vertical, with vomerine teeth. Omosternum with a bony style. The outer metatarsals are bound together. In Trichobatrachus robustus the toes are webbed, and both sexes have the flanks and corresponding portions of the thighs covered with numerous darkly pigmented, filamentous, cutaneous excrescences; these are several millimeters in length, giving the flanks and thighs a "hairy" appearance. Mr. F. F. Laidlaw has examined these structures. Their most remarkable feature is the presence in them of a great number of ordinary flask-shaped cutaneous glands, whilst such glands are scarce on the surrounding skin. They differ in no way from those seen in sections of the skin of the Common Frog. The fibrous connective tissue is dense and vascular; the pigment-cells are most plentiful at the base. Contrary to expectation no nerve-endings were found in these filaments.

Gampsosteonyx has free toes. The terminal joints of the digits stand out beyond the skin, and end in sharp, bony claws, like those of a cat.

Sub-Fam. 3. Dendrobatinae.–About one dozen arboreal little frogs have been separated from the Raninae proper on account of the entire absence of teeth. This mere loss of teeth, and the geographical distribution suggest that these frogs do not form a natural group, but have been developed independently from other Ranidae, the Neotropical Dendrobates from some likewise Neotropical genus like Prostherapis, the Malagasy Mantella from an African form like Megalixalus.

The sacral diapophyses are cylindrical. The omo- and meta-sternum are well developed. The fingers and toes are free, their terminal phalanges are T-shaped and carry regular, round, adhesive discs. The tympanum is distinct, although sometimes, in Dendrobates, very small. The pupil is horizontal.