Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What small animals are there in the lotus pond?

What small animals are there in the lotus pond?

There are generally goldfish, frogs, shrimps, turtles, tadpoles and other animals in the lotus pond.

1, goldfish (Carassiusauratus) is also called golden crucian carp. Cyprinidae evolved from wild red crucian carp and yellow crucian carp. As early as the Jin Dynasty, there was a written record of "red scale fish"-goldfish, which is the quintessence of China.

2. Frogs are amphibians, belonging to Chordata, Amphibia, Anura and Ranidae. Adults have no tails. Its eggs are laid in water, fertilized in vitro, hatched into tadpoles, and breathed through gills. After mutation, adults mainly breathe through the lungs and skin.

3. Shrimp is an arthropod that lives in water and belongs to arthropod crustacea. There are many kinds, including Antarctic red shrimp, green shrimp, river shrimp, grass shrimp, prawn, prawn and lobster. Shrimp has high nutritional value for dietotherapy, and can be steamed and fried, and can be used as Chinese herbal medicine.

4. The tortoise (scientific name: Mauremysreevesii) is a reptile, belonging to the family Tortoise and the genus Pseudomedusa. The tortoise is a semi-aquatic and semi-terrestrial reptile. Mainly inhabit rivers, lakes, reservoirs, ponds and other waters. Trapped in water during the day. When it is hot in summer, they look for shade in droves. Gentle temperament, do not fight with each other. When the enemy is injured or frightened, the head, limbs and tail are retracted into the shell. Turtles are omnivores. They feed on animals and insects, worms, small fish, shrimp, snails, mussels, tender leaves of plants, duckweed, melon skin, wheat grains, rice and weed seeds. Their hunger tolerance is very strong, and they will not die if they don't eat for months. Mainly distributed in Japan, North Korea, South Korea, East Timor, Indonesia (smaller Sanda Island), Palau and China.

5. Tadpole (English: Tadpole) wrote "Kodou" in ancient times, which is the larva of frogs and toads, also called toad ball. The newly hatched tadpoles are spindle-shaped, with no limbs, mouth and inner gills, long tail, flat side and branched outer gills on both sides of the head, which are adsorbed on aquatic plants and fed by the remaining yolk in the body. Mainly in groups. When tadpoles mature, they begin to lose their shape and gradually grow limbs, and then (for frogs and toads) gradually degenerate their tails through apoptosis (controlling cell death) and gradually become frogs or toads.