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Western water-holding frog facts for kids

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Western water-holding frog
Scientific classification
Genus:
Cyclorana
Species:
occidentalis
Synonyms
  • Ranoidea occidentalis (Anstis, Price, Roberts, Catalano, Hines, Doughty, and Donnellan, 2016)
  • Cyclorana occidentalis (Anstis, Price, Roberts, Catalano, Hines, Doughty, and Donnellan, 2016)

The western water-holding frog is a frog from Australia. Scientists are not sure whether it should be called Ranoidea occidentalis or Cyclorana occidentalis. It lives in Western Australia.

The adult male frog is 6.0 cm long and the adult female frog is 7.0 cm long. It has a flat body. The frog lives in places where the ground is dry. It has webbed feet and spends much of its time in the water. Because it has such a wide head, scientist think this frog eats other frogs. They think it eats them when they come to lay eggs in the same temporary bodies of water where the western water-holding frog lays its eggs.

This frog has young when it rains. The female lays eggs in bodies of water that dry up quickly, 500 at a time.

The tadpoles are 8.0 cm long. Once they become young frogs, they are 3.5 cm long.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Cyclorana occidentalis para niños

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