The science and technology publication American Scientist wrote about the "record-breaking, 10-inch-long whopper of a ...
Be it their odd, anachronistic look or just a human tendency to anthropomorphize ... the water through their skin. The relationship between desert rain frogs and humans is relatively harmonious.
Engineered frog-derived peptides may become powerful new antibiotics, showing strong results against resistant bacteria in early testing. Frogs have thrived for hundreds of millions of years, adapting ...
How? Well, by injecting a woman’s urine into the frog’s skin, of course. If the woman is pregnant, it would cause the ...
But frogs may yet hold clues to killing pain. At least one frog does deploy an opioid: the waxy monkey tree frog (Phyllomedusa sauvagii), whose skin is laced with the peptide dermorphin. Although the ...