var arrayFacts=[

"<b>Just the Facts: </b><br><br>Native to North America, bull frogs range in color from green to brown, often have dark blotches on their body, and a yellow or white underside. Female bullfrogs are generally larger than males.",

"<b>A Little Loud: </b><br><br>Bullfrogs are known for their loud, bellowing call, which can carry for quite a distance. <br><br>Their loud call often makes people think that bullfrogs are much larger than they really are.",

"<b>Shape Shifter: </b><br><br>Because there are large spaces between the bullfrog's jaw bones, they tend to shift according to the angle of the floor. This dramatically effects the shape of the bullfrog's head!",

"<b>Long Live the Frog! </b><br><br>The longest living bullfrog made it to 16 years old. Bullfrogs usually live nine years in the wild.",

"<b>Baby, It's Cold Outside: </b><br><br>Bullfrogs generally prefer warm weather. Instead of migrating south for the winter, they will hibernate so they do not have to deal with the cold temperatures.", 

"<b>Hunger Strike: </b><br><br>When a bullfrog is looking for food, it will silently wait for prey to pass by and then strike!", 

"<b>Not So Bright:</b><br><br>Bullfrogs have a brain and spinal cord, which make up their central nervous system.<br><br> According to research, the brain is just a tad bigger than the spinal cord.",

"<b>Hungry, Hungry Frogs:</b><br><br> Bullfrogs will eat anything they can get into their mouths.<br><br>Some of their favorite foods include small mammals, birds, fish, snakes, other species of frogs, and turtles. ",

"<b>Bullfrogs Abound!</b><br><br> Bullfrogs commonly live in bodies of water such as ponds, swamps, and areas that contain dense forms of vegetation. <br><br>They are common to North America, though they have been introduced to other countries throughout the world. <br><br>In Europe and the western U.S are trying to control bullfrog populations because they tend to drive out native species.",

"<b>And You Thought Puberty Was Rough:</b><br><br> Like humans, the male bullfrog has testes and the female bullfrog has ovaries.<br><br> Bullfrogs reproduce in the springtime and can lay up to 25,000 eggs at a time. <br><br>The eggs that are laid will eventually become tadpoles, which will, over time, turn into adult frogs. This process can take up to 2 years.",

"<b>Finger Lickin' Good:</b><br><br> In Southern United States, bullfrogs are considered a delicious delicacy. <br><br>Harvested from local swamps and lakes, the bull frogs' legs are generally removed and fried up! When served, they look similar to chicken drum sticks.",

"<b>The Long Jump:</b><br><br> The average bullfrog can leap between 3 and 6 feet in a single hop!",

"<b>A Man's Home is His Castle:</b><br><br> Bullfrogs are very territorial and spend a great deal of time guarding their homes. If they are feeling threatened, they will issue loud warning calls or even wrestle their predator! <br><br>Female bullfrogs tend to show great interest in males that have territory that is well stocked with prey.",

"<b>Eye Spy:</b><br><br> Bullfrogs often stay in the water with only their eyes peeking out. This allows them to spot any predators that could be approaching. <br><br>Bullfrogs have eyelids similar to humans, which protect their eyes from any particles in the air and help to keep their eyes moist.",

"<b>Bummer of a Blind Spot:</b><br><br> Bull frogs have a blind spot right between their nostrils, which prevents them from seeing directly in front of them. <br><br>This forces them to turn their heads from side to side in order to get a good view of their prey.",

"<b>Courageous Critter:</b><br><br> Bullfrogs can eat animals that are surprisingly large, including bats and even dangerous snakes! <br><br>In fact, one bullfrog that was trapped in a snake cage at a Zoo managed to survive and also to eat 16 baby cobras.   ",

"<b>Calling Card:</b><br><br> Bull frogs are very vocal and have distinct predatory calls for each area in which they live.<br><br> Should more than one species live in an area, they will make sure their calls sound different so each species can be recognized.",


"<b>Accounting For Taste: </b><br><br>When frightened, toads release a foul tasting milky liquid to make themselves unappetizing to predators.",

"<b>In Self-Defense:</b><br><br> A toad always has two lumps on the back of its head, regardless of its shape and size. <br><br>These are its parotid glands, which enable the toad to release poison when frightened. The level of toxicity of the poison varies greatly between species. ",

"<b>Alice in Wonderland:</b><br><br> Some toad poisons have psychedelic effects. Psychoactive toads produce bufotoxin, which is also found in wild, poisonous mushrooms. <br><br>Generally, people will boil, vaporize, or smoke the toad’s skin to release its hallucinogenic toxins. ",

"<b>What's in a Name?</b><br><br> There is no real cut and dry distinction between the toad and the frog--technically, they are the same animal! <br><br>Still, because they tend to live in different environments, they have some different characteristics. <br><br>Toads have short legs, large bodies and thick skins. Frogs generally spend more time in the water and are much faster than toads.",

"<b>Egg-sessive: </b><br><br>The cane toad is a poisonous species that is found in Australia as well as other parts of the world. <br><br>Females will produce at least 8,000 but usually no more than 35,000 eggs per cycle and may have 2 cycles per year. <br><br>Cane toad eggs usually hatch within 72 hours and become tadpoles within the first few weeks of life. ",

"<b>Toads Big and Small:</b><br><br> There are 300 species of toad throughout the world, 21 of which live in North America. <br><br> The cane toad grows to 23 centimeters in length, while the Colorado River toad tops out at about 17 centimeters. <br><br>The smallest toad in North America is the Oak toad, which is only 2.5 centimeters in length. ",

"<b>Not a Head Turner:</b><br><br> To compensate for their limited necks, toads have large, protruding eyes that can look in multiple directions. <br><br>Toads can hop in one direction while looking in another, so they barely need to turn their heads.",

"<b>Tough to Swallow:</b><br><br> Toads can puff up their bodies so that they are difficult to swallow. If they are too big to eat, they may have a chance at escape!",

"<b>Pick your Poison:</b><br><br> Cane toads were brought to Australia to control cane beetle populations, which were destroying sugar crops. <br><br>Unfortunately, instead of eating the beetles they ate native animals, including other frogs.<br><br> While the sugar beetle numbers were eventually reduced by pesticides, cane toads continue to pose a threat to the Australian ecosystem.",


"<b>Back off or else!</b><br><br> Poison Arrow Frogs, usually found in Central and South American Rain Forests, are extremely tiny (about the size of an adult’s thumb nail), extremely beautiful, and extremely poisonous.<br><br> The frog’s skin emits poisonous fluids, which are deadly to humans and animals. The frog's skin contains about 200 micrograms of this special poison and it only takes about two micrograms to kill a human being.<br><br> So back off!",

"<b>Attack of the Zombie Frogs!! </b><br><br>No, not really, but a Wood frog can come \"back to life\" after they have been frozen.<br><br> It’s true! If you thaw out a Wood frog, it will come back just like it was before and go on living like nothing ever happened! <br><br>This is because Wood frogs use glucose in their bodies and this allows their vital organs protection while they are frozen.",


"<b>Breathe slowly.</b><br><br>A hibernating frog needs so little oxygen that it gets all the air it needs to stay alive by breathing through its own skin. The moisture it needs is absorbed through the skin as well.",

"<b>The eyes have it!</b><br><br> Just like humans, frogs have many different eye colors. But did you know that the iris of a frog’s eye can be many different shapes too?<br><br> They can be round just like us, as well as vertical (up and down), horizontal (straight across), heart-shaped, a triangle, or even star-shaped!<br><br> Speaking of frog’s eyes, when a frog captures his meal and swallows it, his big eyes will close and go back into his head! This added weight and pressure, pushes the frog's meal right down his throat!",

"<b>They don't deserve their reputation.</b><br><br>You cannot get warts from a frog.",


"<b>Back off or else!</b><br><br> Poison Arrow Frogs, usually found in Central and South American Rain Forests, are extremely poisonous, extremely tiny (about the size of an adult’s thumb nail), and extremely beautiful.<br><br>They can be found in many different colors from yellow and black to red and blue.<br><br>The frog’s skin puts out poisonous fluids, which are deadly to a human or animal.<br><br>Its skin contains about 200 micrograms of this special poison and it only takes about 40 of those micrograms to kill a human being. So back off!",

"<b>Only in the Americas...</b><br><br>The poison dart frog is native to Central and South America. <br><br>The only frog to live outside of Central and South America is the green and black poison dart frog (aka poison arrow frog), which is found on select Hawaiin islands.",  

"<b>Bad Reputation:</b><br><br> There are over 100 species of poison dart frogs, few of which are toxic to animals and humans.<br><br>Only the species in the Phyllobate genus carry a highly toxic poison, which can be deadly.", 

"<b>If You Get Lemons, Make Lemonade:</b><br><br> South American native tribes use deadly secretions from poison dart frogs to hunt animals. <br><br>They can extract poison from the frogs by roasting them over open flames, or they can simply rub their arrow tips along the frogs' skin. <br><br>If an animal is struck with a poison arrow, it will die within minutes.",

"<b>You Are What You Eat: </b><br><br>Poison dart frogs are not toxic because of genetics alone. Studies have shown that their diet of ants, beetles and mites enables them to produce their famed poison. <br><br>When many types of poison dart frogs are removed from the wild and fed such insects as fruit flies and crickets, they are only slightly toxic.",


];

