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There is a downside to those big, beautiful
frog
eyes. While they may attract the admiration of their beady-eyed human
counterparts, frog eyes bulge not only on the outside but on the inside
of their faces. The underside of their eyeball is covered by a sheet of tissue
and protrudes into the mouth cavity.
Frogs literally cannot swallow
unless they use their eyes to push the food down their stomach, Richard
Landesman, zoologist at the University of Vermont, amplifies.
In order for
frogs to swallow, they must be able to
push material in the mouth backwards, into the esophagus. “Humans use their
tongue to accomplish this task” however,
frogs use their eyes. By
depressing their eyes, food can be pushed posterior in the Mouth.
Frogs
also use this same mechanism to breathe, since they lack a diaphragm.
Actually, if we ate what
frogs eat, we might close
our eyes when swallowing too.
Submitted by Scott McNeff of Wells, Maine.
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