The
frog catches insects and other small food animals on the sticky tip of its long
tongue. All
summer long, the little frog squats, motionless, on the bank of a quiet pond or
brook and watches for passing insects.
If
a fly or cricket passes within reach, the frog’s long tongue will snap out like
a flickering whip, so fast that you can scarcely follow the action. The
insect is caught on the sticky tip. Just as quickly the frog flips
its tongue back into its mouth.
The
frog’s tongue is fastened at the front of its mouth, not the back, so that it
can be flipped out a long way. The frog’s mouth is equipped with feeble,
practically useless teeth, which are present only in the upper jaw. So it
must live mostly on small creatures that it can swallow in one gulp.
Frogs
also eat earthworms, spiders and minnows that they catch in the water.
Toads capture their food in much of same way frogs do. Frogs
and toads help man by eating many harmful insects to be found in gardens and on
farms. - Dick Rogers
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