People around the world began documenting unusual frogs in the 1700s. Like the frog pictured, they had extra or missing legs. The phenomenon is due to an infection by a parasite called Ribeiroia ondatrae.
R. ondatrae is a flatworm. During its life cycle, the parasite travels between three different host organisms. Newly hatched flatworms first hijack a freshwater ramshorn snail’s reproductive system, where they produce larvae—the immature stage of their life cycle. One-fifth of the snail’s body mass becomes a “parasite factory,” explains Pieter Johnson, an ecologist at the University of Colorado Boulder.