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African clawed frog - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Western clawed frog - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Western clawed frog ( Xenopus tropicalis ) is a species of frog in the Pipidae family. It is the only species in the Xenopus genus to have a diploid genome. Its genome has been sequenced, maki...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_clawed_frog |
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Welcome to the new and improved African Clawed frog website. ... This website will hopefully tell you most things you need to know about how to keep the African Clawed Frog! If you've been here before you should press 'refresh' on your browser to see if there's anything new!
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Xenopus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Often these frogs are confused for their smaller cousin, the African Dwarf Frog. How to tell the Clawed Frog from the Dwarf Frog. ... (Note: the frog described is probably a Clawed Frog, because Grow-A-Frog kits never sold Dwarf Frogs in their kits.)
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If your froggy is of the Albino variety, you can pretty much bet that it's a Clawed frog and should NOT be kept in the same tank as the Dwarf frogs because it will soon outgrow and then probably EAT the dwarfies! The photo on the right is a two-year-old Albino African Clawed frog, sent in by Scott & Vicky Edwards.
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Introduction Although the African Clawed Frog, Xenopus laevis, is commonly seen in captivity, little authoritative information on its husbandry and breeding is available to the lay public. ... The African Clawed Frog exemplifies the notion that nature is loathe to mess with a successful adaptation. Well-preserved fossils...
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The frog egg is a huge cell; its volume is over 1.6 million times larger than a normal frog cell. During embryonic development, the egg will be converted into a tadpole containing millions of cells but containing the same volume of material.
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