Frog origami steps are as follows:
Materials: colored paper.
1, fold diagonally and unfold as follows.
2, horizontal direction of the fold, as shown below.
3, the left side according to the horizontal imprint inward, folded to the center line position, see the picture below.
4. The right side is also folded in the same way to the position shown in the picture below.
5. Fold the upper right corner to the top, see the position shown in the picture below.
6. Fold the corners of the upper left side symmetrically to the position shown in the picture below.
7. Turn it over and see the picture below.
8. Fold the left and right side corners inward, and the frog is folded.
Frog appearance and distribution range
A. Appearance:
The body of frogs can be divided into head, trunk and limbs 3 parts. Frogs are amphibians of the genus Fringed Frogs of the family Frogidae, with a slightly triangular head, larger than wide; large and protruding eyes; short forelimbs, bluntly pointed phalanges and toes, and shorter and thicker hind limbs, with a few full webbing between the toes.
The back is rougher, living blue-green, yellow-green, dark green, gray-green, gray-brown, etc., with irregular black spots, the ventral skin is white, smooth, no spots. Frog body length up to 20 centimeters.
The belly is white, which allows it to hide in the grass, catching pests will be easier, but also to protect itself. Its skin also helps it breathe. It has an air sac that only male frogs have. Its mooing sound is very similar to a cow's moo. The frog is light and skinny and has suction cups on the ends of its fingers.
Two, distribution range:
The frog is most common and abundant in the plains and hills from north to south China; it is also found in Japan, the Korean Peninsula, Russia and other places. Frogs are suitable for living in amphibious environments, mostly inhabiting low-lying and wet places such as rivers, ponds, streams, ditches, lakes, and shallows where water and grasses are overgrown; they lie in wait by day and come out by night, and at night, they move around to look for food.
The young frogs and adult frogs are carnivorous, generally feeding on locusts, rice stem borers, rice insect cicadas, rice stinkbugs, mole crickets, tortoiseshells, butterfly moths, dragonflies, beetles and other rice pests as well as earthworms, yellow mealworms, fly maggots, and small fishes and shrimps, etc., and they can also devour pieces of fish meat and the entrails of chickens, ducks, and fishes.