The flow chart describes the different stages in the natural process in which a frog grows.
It is unequivocal that there are six principal stages outlining this course of amphibious formation, commencing with the mating of an army of frogs and culminating at maturity of their young.
The cycle begins at copulation, where the parents mate in shallow areas of water, which causes the female to spawn its eggs in a clump of tiny transparent balls, scientifically known as frogspawn, with a tadpole embryo near the center of each ovum. Subsequently, all fertilized frogspawn will float along the surface of the water while evolution runs its course until hatching, resulting in the emergence of small tadpoles. Following this is the extraordinary mitigation of the amphibian physiology, whereby hind limbs are first to appear.
Although the tadpoles have undergone some substantial transformation from being unfertilized eggs to growing legs aiding mobility in water, their transition has not been completed yet. At this point in the cycle, their front extremities emerge while their tails begin to recede into the core body but not entirely. Moreover, once tadpoles had developed into froglets, these tiny amphibians migrate onto land where they experience maturation. The process concludes with an adult frog finding a mate to continue the cycle, thereby satisfying the law of nature in maintaining the specie.
The flow chart
describes
the
different
stages in the natural process in which a frog grows.
It is unequivocal that there are six principal stages outlining this course of amphibious formation, commencing with the mating of an army of frogs and culminating at maturity of their young.
The cycle
begins
at copulation, where the parents mate in shallow areas of water, which causes the female to spawn its eggs in a clump of tiny transparent balls,
scientifically
known as frogspawn, with a
tadpole
embryo near the center of each ovum.
Subsequently
, all fertilized frogspawn will float along the surface of the water while evolution runs its course until hatching, resulting in the emergence of
small
tadpoles
. Following this is the extraordinary mitigation of the amphibian physiology, whereby hind limbs are
first
to appear.
Although the
tadpoles
have undergone
some
substantial transformation from
being unfertilized
eggs to growing legs aiding mobility in water, their transition has not
been completed
yet
. At this point in the cycle, their front extremities emerge while their tails
begin
to recede into the core body
but
not
entirely
.
Moreover
, once
tadpoles
had developed into
froglets
, these tiny amphibians migrate onto land where they experience maturation. The process concludes with an adult frog finding a mate to continue the cycle, thereby satisfying the law of nature in maintaining the specie.