📌 Snapshot
- The 2026-27 reprint of this chapter restricts itself to a single representative vertebrate — the frog (Rana tigrina) — and uses it to illustrate how tissues organise into organs and organ systems in a multicellular animal.
- The opening section establishes the cell → tissue → organ → organ system hierarchy and notes that all complex animals are built from only four basic tissue types (epithelial, connective, muscular, neural), with the heart given as the example organ containing all four.
- The bulk of the content (§7.2) is the morphology and anatomy of the frog: external features, digestive, respiratory, circulatory & lymphatic, excretory, neural/endocrine, sense organs, and male/female reproductive systems.
- Distinctive frog facts the NCERT repeatedly emphasises — three-chambered heart (2 atria + 1 ventricle), nucleated RBCs, ureotelic excretion, hepatic and renal portal systems, 10 pairs of cranial nerves, 10–12 vasa efferentia, female lays 2500–3000 ova — are precisely the kind of recall CUET tests.
- CUET treats this chapter as high-yield because every paragraph yields a clean, single-answer fact (numbers, names, locations), making it ideal for NTA-style MCQs.
📖 Detailed Notes
2.1 Core concepts
- In multicellular animals, a group of similar cells along with intercellular substances performing a specific function is called a tissue; tissues organise in specific proportion and pattern to form organs, and two or more organs performing a common function form an organ system (NCERT §7 intro, p. 79).
- All complex animals consist of only four basic types of tissues — epithelial, connective, muscular and neural — and the heart is an organ that contains all four (NCERT §7.1, p. 80).
- Morphology is the external appearance of organs/body parts in animals; anatomy is the study of morphology of internal organs (NCERT §7.1, p. 80).
- Frogs belong to class Amphibia of phylum Chordata; the common Indian species is Rana tigrina; they are poikilotherms (cold-blooded), exhibit mimicry (protective camouflage), undergo aestivation in summer and hibernation in winter (NCERT §7.2, p. 80).
- External morphology: skin is smooth, moist and slippery due to mucus; dorsal side olive green with dark irregular spots, ventral side pale yellow; frog never drinks water but absorbs it through the skin; body divisible only into head and trunk — neck and tail are absent (NCERT §7.2.1, pp. 80–81).
- Eyes are bulged and covered by a nictitating membrane; tympanum on either side of eyes receives sound; hind limbs have 5 webbed digits and are larger/muscular, forelimbs have 4 digits; sexual dimorphism — males have vocal sacs and a copulatory pad on the first digit of the forelimb (NCERT §7.2.1, p. 81).
- Digestive system: alimentary canal is short because frogs are carnivores; sequence — mouth → buccal cavity → pharynx → oesophagus → stomach → intestine → rectum → cloaca; bilobed tongue captures food; stomach secretes HCl and gastric juices; bile from gall bladder and pancreatic juice from pancreas reach the duodenum via a common bile duct; bile emulsifies fat, pancreatic juice digests carbohydrates and proteins; absorption occurs via villi and microvilli (NCERT §7.2.2, pp. 81–82).
- Respiration is by three routes: (a) cutaneous through skin in water (and during aestivation/hibernation), (b) buccopharyngeal through buccal cavity on land, and (c) pulmonary through a pair of pink, elongated, sac-like lungs in the thorax (NCERT §7.2.2, p. 82).
- Vascular system is closed; heart is three-chambered (two atria + one ventricle), enclosed in pericardium; sinus venosus (triangular) joins the right atrium and receives blood via the vena cava; ventricle opens into a sac-like conus arteriosus on the ventral side; hepatic portal (liver–intestine) and renal portal (kidney–lower body) systems are present; RBCs are nucleated and contain haemoglobin; lymph lacks a few proteins and RBCs, and the lymphatic system consists of lymph, lymph channels and lymph nodes (NCERT §7.2.2, p. 82).
- Excretory system: paired kidneys (compact, dark red, bean-like, on both sides of vertebral column), ureters, urinary bladder, cloaca; functional unit is the uriniferous tubule / nephron; in males the ureters function as urinogenital ducts opening into cloaca, in females the ureters and oviducts open separately into the cloaca; frog is ureotelic (NCERT §7.2.2, pp. 82–83).
- Nervous system has three divisions — central (brain + spinal cord), peripheral (cranial + spinal nerves) and autonomic (sympathetic + parasympathetic); 10 pairs of cranial nerves; brain enclosed in cranium and divided into forebrain (olfactory lobes + paired cerebral hemispheres + unpaired diencephalon), midbrain (pair of optic lobes) and hindbrain (cerebellum + medulla oblongata); medulla passes through the foramen magnum into the spinal cord (NCERT §7.2.2, p. 83).
- Endocrine glands listed in frog: pituitary, thyroid, parathyroid, thymus, pineal body, pancreatic islets, adrenals and gonads (NCERT §7.2.2, p. 83).
- Sense organs of frog: touch (sensory papillae), taste (taste buds), smell (nasal epithelium), vision (eyes — simple, single-unit), hearing (tympanum + internal ear); external ear is absent, only tympanum is visible externally; the ear functions in both hearing and balance/equilibrium (NCERT §7.2.2, p. 83).
- Male reproductive system: pair of yellowish ovoid testes attached to the upper part of kidneys by a double fold of peritoneum called mesorchium; 10–12 vasa efferentia arise from the testes, enter the kidneys, open into Bidder's canal, and ultimately drain into the urinogenital duct → cloaca, which is a small median chamber passing faeces, urine and sperms (NCERT §7.2.2, pp. 83–84).
- Female reproductive system: pair of ovaries situated near kidneys with no functional connection to them; a pair of oviducts opens separately into the cloaca; a mature female lays 2500–3000 ova at a time; fertilisation is external in water; development passes through a tadpole larval stage that undergoes metamorphosis into adult (NCERT §7.2.2, p. 84).
- Ecological/economic value: frogs eat insects and protect crops, serve as an important link in the food chain/web; in some countries their muscular legs are eaten (NCERT §7.2.2, p. 84).
2.2 Definitions to memorise
| Term | Definition | Page |
|---|---|---|
| Tissue | Group of similar cells along with intercellular substances performing a specific function | 79 |
| Organ system | Two or more organs that perform a common function by physical and/or chemical interaction | 79 |
| Morphology (in animals) | External appearance of organs or parts of the body | 80 |
| Anatomy | Study of morphology of internal organs in animals | 80 |
| Poikilotherm | Animal whose body temperature varies with the environment (cold-blooded) | 80 |
| Mimicry | Protective coloration that allows the frog to hide from enemies (camouflage) | 80 |
| Aestivation | Summer sleep — shelter in deep burrows to escape extreme heat | 80 |
| Hibernation | Winter sleep — shelter in deep burrows to escape extreme cold | 80 |
| Nictitating membrane | Membrane covering the bulged eyes of the frog, protecting them while in water | 80 |
| Cutaneous respiration | Gas exchange through the skin (used in water and during aestivation/hibernation) | 82 |
| Pulmonary respiration | Gas exchange through lungs on land | 82 |
| Sinus venosus | Triangular structure joining the right atrium of frog heart; receives blood via vena cava | 82 |
| Conus arteriosus | Sac-like structure on the ventral side of the heart into which the ventricle opens | 82 |
| Hepatic portal system | Venous connection between liver and intestine | 82 |
| Renal portal system | Venous connection between kidney and lower parts of the body | 82 |
| Ureotelic | Animal that excretes urea as its nitrogenous waste (e.g., frog) | 83 |
| Mesorchium | Double fold of peritoneum that attaches testes to the upper part of kidneys | 83 |
| Bidder's canal | Canal in the kidney into which vasa efferentia open before draining into the urinogenital duct | 84 |
| Cloaca | Small median chamber that passes faecal matter, urine and sperms to the exterior | 84 |
2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember
- Figure 7.1, p. 80 — External features of frog: labels head, trunk, eye, forelimb, hind limb. Memorise that neck and tail are absent.
- Figure 7.2, p. 81 — Internal organs of frog with complete digestive system: heart, oesophagus, liver, gall bladder, lung, stomach, fat bodies, kidney, ureter, urinary bladder, intestine, rectum, cloaca, cloacal aperture. Note the relative positions — heart and lungs above, kidneys ventral to fat bodies, urinary bladder ventral to rectum.
- Figure 7.3, p. 83 — Male reproductive system: testis, vasa efferentia, kidney, adrenal gland, urinogenital duct, urinary bladder, rectum, cloaca, cloacal aperture. The urinogenital duct (a single tube) is the key male-specific feature.
- Figure 7.4, p. 83 — Female reproductive system: ovary with ova, oviduct, ureter (separate from oviduct), urinary bladder, cloaca, cloacal aperture. The separateness of ureter and oviduct is the key female-specific feature.
- Process — pathway of food: mouth → buccal cavity → pharynx → oesophagus → stomach → duodenum → intestine → rectum → cloaca (p. 81–82).
- Process — brain divisions: forebrain (olfactory lobes + cerebral hemispheres + diencephalon) → midbrain (optic lobes) → hindbrain (cerebellum + medulla oblongata) → spinal cord through foramen magnum (p. 83).
2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points
- Four digits vs five digits — Forelimbs end in 4 digits, hind limbs in 5 webbed digits. NTA loves to flip these.
- Heart chambers — The frog heart is three-chambered (2 atria + 1 ventricle), not four. The sinus venosus and conus arteriosus are accessory chambers but the chamber count is three.
- RBCs of frog are nucleated — A common distractor states "non-nucleated like mammals." NCERT explicitly states frog RBCs are nucleated (p. 82).
- Male vs female urogenital plumbing — In males the ureter doubles as the urinogenital duct (sperm + urine share the same exit); in females ureters and oviducts open separately into the cloaca. Ovaries have no functional connection with kidneys (pp. 83–84).
- Vasa efferentia count — 10–12 (not 10 pairs). Cranial nerves are 10 pairs. NTA mixes these two "tens."
- Aestivation vs hibernation — Aestivation = summer sleep, hibernation = winter sleep. During both, gas exchange takes place through skin (p. 82).
- Bile route — Bile is secreted by liver, stored in gall bladder, and reaches the duodenum via the common bile duct along with pancreatic juice (p. 82).
- Skin respiration vs lung respiration — Skin is the only respiratory surface in water and during hibernation/aestivation; lungs operate on land along with skin and buccal cavity (p. 82). A common trap is "only lungs on land."
- Tongue attachment — The frog's tongue is bilobed at the tip and attached to the front of the floor of the buccal cavity (free posteriorly), allowing it to be flicked out (p. 81).
- Hepatic vs renal portal system — The frog has both a hepatic portal system (intestine to liver) and a renal portal system (hind limbs to kidneys) (p. 82); the renal portal system is absent in mammals — an NTA contrast trap.
2.5 Quick comparison table — frog systems at a glance
| # | Feature | Detail (NCERT) | Page |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Class | Amphibia | 80 |
| 2 | Scientific name | Rana tigrina | 80 |
| 3 | Body divisions | Head + trunk (no neck/tail) | 80 |
| 4 | Skin type | Smooth, moist, slippery, glandular | 80 |
| 5 | Forelimb digits | 4 | 80 |
| 6 | Hind limb digits | 5, webbed | 80 |
| 7 | Heart chambers | 3 (2 atria + 1 ventricle) | 82 |
| 8 | RBC nucleus | Nucleated | 82 |
| 9 | Respiratory surfaces | Skin, buccal cavity, lungs | 82 |
| 10 | Excretory product | Urea (ureotelic) | 83 |
| 11 | Kidney type | Mesonephric, dark red, bean-shaped | 82 |
| 12 | Vasa efferentia | 10–12 from testes | 83 |
| 13 | Male urinogenital duct | Single (ureter = vas deferens) | 83 |
| 14 | Female ducts | Ureter & oviduct open separately | 84 |
| 15 | Fertilisation / development | External; indirect (tadpole) | 84 |
🎯 Practice MCQs
First 3 questions free · create a free account to unlock the rest — answers & explanations included, no payment needed
Q1. The frog heart consists of:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
NCERT explicitly states the heart has three chambers — two atria and one ventricle, covered by the pericardium. Option (A) describes a mammalian/avian heart, not amphibian.
Q2. Which of the following statements about the frog's reproductive plumbing is correct?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
In females, ureters and oviducts open separately into the cloaca, and the ovaries have no functional connection with the kidneys. In males, by contrast, ureters act as urinogenital ducts — sperm and urine share one channel.
Q3. Match the following structures of the frog with their descriptions: | Column I | Column II | |---|---| | (i) Sinus venosus | (1) Sac-like structure on ventral side of heart | | (ii) Conus arteriosus | (2) Membrane covering the heart | | (iii) Pericardium | (3) Triangular structure joining right atrium | | (iv) Mesorchium | (4) Double fold of peritoneum attaching testes to kidneys |
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Sinus venosus is the triangular structure joining the right atrium; conus arteriosus is the ventral sac into which the ventricle opens; pericardium is the heart's covering membrane; mesorchium attaches testes to kidneys.
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Q4. Assertion (A): The frog is described as a ureotelic animal. Reason (R): Excretory wastes are carried by blood to the kidneys where urea is separated and excreted.
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
NCERT states "The frog excretes urea and thus is a ureotelic animal. Excretory wastes are carried by blood into the kidney where it is separated and excreted." The reason directly supplies the mechanism behind the assertion.
Q5. A student observes a frog specimen and notes the following features: (i) a copulatory pad on the first digit of the forelimb, (ii) the presence of vocal sacs, (iii) the forelimbs end in four digits. Which of the following inferences is correct?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
Vocal sacs and the copulatory pad on the first forelimb digit are male-only features. The four-digit forelimb is normal for frogs (hind limbs have five). Females lack both vocal sacs and the copulatory pad.
Q6. Which one of the following correctly describes the frog?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
NCERT explicitly states RBCs are nucleated and lymph differs from blood by lacking a few proteins and RBCs. The body of frog has only head and trunk (no neck, no tail); fertilisation is external and a tadpole larval stage is present.
Q7. The vasa efferentia in the male frog:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
NCERT states the vasa efferentia are 10–12 in number, arise from the testes, enter the kidneys and open into Bidder's canal, which then communicates with the urinogenital duct to the cloaca. Ten pairs is the count of cranial nerves, not vasa efferentia — a classic distractor swap.
Q8. Which of the following sets correctly groups the divisions of the frog's brain with their components?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
NCERT specifies that the forebrain includes olfactory lobes, paired cerebral hemispheres and the unpaired diencephalon; the midbrain is characterised by a pair of optic lobes; the hindbrain consists of cerebellum and medulla oblongata. Option (A) wrongly places optic lobes in the forebrain.
Q9. The renal portal system in the frog carries blood from:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
The renal portal system collects blood from the hind limbs and routes it through the kidneys before it returns to the heart. The intestine-to-liver route is the hepatic portal system. The renal portal system is a characteristic anamniote feature, absent in mammals.
Q10. Which structure of the frog's digestive system both stores bile and connects to the duodenum via the common bile duct?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
Bile is secreted by the liver, **stored in the gall bladder**, and released through the common bile duct (along with pancreatic juice) into the duodenum. The liver only secretes; storage is in the gall bladder.
Q11. During hibernation and aestivation, gaseous exchange in the frog takes place primarily through:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
When the frog is inactive on land (aestivation in summer; hibernation in winter) or submerged in water, **skin** is the sole respiratory organ. Lungs and buccal cavity function only during active terrestrial life. Frogs lack gills as adults.
Q12. Sexual dimorphism in the frog is shown by the presence of which of the following only in males?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Males alone possess vocal sacs (for croaking) and a copulatory pad on the first digit of the forelimb (for amplexus grip). Webbed hind limbs, five hind-limb digits and nucleated RBCs are species-level features common to both sexes.
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