Amphibians
The extraordinarily diverse vertebrate class Amphibia is divided into three orders: newts and salamanders, frogs and toads, and the curiously worm-like caecilians. The taxonomic name amphibian is derived from the Greek amphibios, meaning “double life”. Although most amphibians transform from aquatic larvae to terrestrial adults, some species, such as the golden alpine salamander, live permanently on land while others, such as the axolotl, never leave water. Of the world’s c. 6,300 amphibian species, around one in three are threatened with extinction.
Explore ARKive for videos and images of endangered amphibians, and learn about amphibian conservation, biology and more in our species fact-files.
Click on the first letter of the scientific name.
Species 1 - 4 of 4
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Information on the Amboli toad (Xanthophryne tigerinus) is being researched and written and will appear here shortly... More
1 Image
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ARKive is working with the Global Amphibian Assessment (GAA) to source images of the world’s threatened amphibian species.A collaboration... More
6 Images
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Information on the Itombwe Massif clawed frog is currently being researched and written and will appear here shortly... More
2 Images
0 videos
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ARKive is working with the Global Amphibian Assessment (GAA) to source images of the world's threatened amphibian species.A collaboration... More
6 Images
0 videos
Species 1 - 4 of 4