Temperature.–Amphibia, like Fishes and Reptiles, are, as a rule, classed as cold-blooded animals, in opposition to the warm-blooded Birds and Mammals. This distinction is one of degree only. The terms poikilothermous and homothermous (ποίκιλος, variable; ὅμος, equable) are based upon a sounder principle, but are likewise liable to exceptions. Those creatures which, like Birds and Mammals, possess a specific temperature of their own under normal conditions, that of hibernation being excepted, are homothermous. Cold-blooded creatures have no specific temperature; they more or less assume that of their surroundings. Frogs and newts, for instance, when living in the water, naturally assume its temperature, which is, of course, many degrees lower in a cold spring than in a shallow pond warmed by the sun on a hot summer's day. The same applies to the changes from day to night. Dark-coloured tortoises basking in the sun are sometimes so hot that they are disagreeable to touch, since they possess but little mechanism for regulating their heat. The same individual cools down during a chilly night by perhaps 40° C. Anura are, however, very susceptible to heat; most of them die when their temperature rises to about 40° C. Under such conditions they die quickly when in the water, but in the air their moist skin counteracts the heat, lowering it by evaporation; otherwise it would be impossible for a tree-frog to sit in the glaring sun in a temperature of 120° F. Toads and others with drier skins seek the shade, hide under stones, or bury themselves in the coolest spots available, and many Amphibia and Reptiles aestivate in a torpid condition during the dry and hot season. Many of them can endure a surprising amount of cold, and during hibernation their temperature may sink to freezing-point. This power of endurance does not apply to all alike; tropical species can stand less than those which live in temperate and cold regions. In spite of many assertions to the contrary, it may safely be stated that none of our European frogs, toads, and newts survive being frozen hard. They may be cooled down to nearly -1° C., and they may be partially frozen into the ice. Circulation of the blood is suspended in such cooled-down frogs; their limbs may become so hard that they break like a piece of wood, but the citadel of life, the heart, must not sink much below freezing-point, and must itself not be frozen, if the animal is to have a chance of recovering. The protoplasm resists a long time, and so long as some of it is left unfrozen the rest will recover. Hibernating frogs are lost if they are reached by prolonged frost during exceptionally severe winters. Every frog will be killed in an artificial pond with a clean concrete bottom, but if there is sufficient mud, with decaying vegetable matter, the creatures survive, simply because they are not absolutely frozen. A severe winter not infrequently kills off all the younger creatures, while the older and more experienced hide themselves more carefully and live to propagate the race.
Geographical Distribution.
There is a very ably written chapter on the geographical distribution of the Amphibia by Boulenger in the Catalogue of Batrachia Gradientia, pp. 104-118. He came to the important conclusion that the geographical distribution of the Amphibia agrees in general with that of the freshwater fishes. Günther's division into a Northern, Equatorial, and Southern zone is modified only in so far as the last two are combined into one, "Tasmania and Patagonia not differing in any point regarding their Frog Fauna from Australia and South America respectively."
Boulenger recognises–
II. The Northern zone–(1) Palaearctic, (2) North American, region.
II. The Equatorial Southern zone.
A. Firmisternia division = Cyprinoid division of Günther.
1. Indian region.
2. African region.
B. Arcifera division = Acyprinoid division of Günther.