These Amazing Photos Will Make You Think Twice About Animal Deformities (PHOTOS)

PHOTOS: A Whole New Way Of Looking At Frogs
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Brandon Ballengée is really into frogs and amphibians. His interest isn't like ours -- common folk that used to stumble upon them in ponds as a kid and thought they were cute -- but to the extent where this artist-biologist-environmental activist has made them his life's work.

Ballengée, whose research focuses on population declines and causes of deformities in amphibians, has been collecting these tiny critters from all over the world for more than 10 years. He uses enzymes to make their tissues transparent and injects colored dyes to make their bones, tissues and deformities stand out. The specimens are then posed, imaged with a high-resolution scanner and printed with water-based ink, according to Metro. His work provides an unprecedented view on this environmental issue -- and invokes empathy towards amphibians by making them look beautiful.

"The specimen preparation does allow for a level of abstraction, while at the same time revealing the complex architecture of these terrible abnormalities," Ballengée told Metro. "This push and pull is important to bring people in close to the art -– for a one-on-one experience with an organism they may have had a part in creating."

After one quick glance at his work, it's clear that many of these frogs have excess limbs or other oddities. So why is that?

Ballengée's research has pointed to predation and parasites -- both spurred in large part by chemical run-off -- as the culprits, according to Fast Company. And the U.S. Geological Surveys identifies injuries from predators, a specific minute parasite (fluke), nutritional deficiencies and contaminants as the leading causes of amphibian malformations and decline. Monitoring and research on this subject is still ongoing.

These images are featured in Ballengée's book, Malamp: The Occurrence of Deformities in Amphibians. Some of the Malamp Reliquaries are currently part of a retrospective exhibition of his work at Museum Het Domein in Sittard, Netherlands that runs through June. And if these images have caught your attention, Ballengée has intriguing images of many other species on his website.

DFA 147: Phaethon
(Courtesy of Brandon Ballengée and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, NY)
DFA 23: Khárôn
(Courtesy of Brandon Ballengée and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, NY)
DFA 156: Persephonē
(Courtesy of Brandon Ballengée and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, NY)
DFA 117: Galatée
(Courtesy of Brandon Ballengée and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, NY)
DFA 201: Apollo
(Courtesy of Brandon Ballengée and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, NY)
DFB 39: Priapus
(Courtesy of Brandon Ballengée and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, NY)
DFBB: Khaos
(Courtesy of Brandon Ballengée and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, NY)

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Before You Go

Threatened Animals
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Baby Black Rhino(02 of16)
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A baby Black Rhinoceros stands in front of its mother in an enclosure at Tokyo's Ueno Zoo in June 2009. The Black Rhinoceros is a critically endangered species, according to the International Rhino Foundation there are less than 5,000 surviving in the world. (credit:Getty Images)
Orangutans(03 of16)
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An orangutan infant at Ragunan Zoo in Jakarta, Indonesia, on February 15, 2007. Orangutans are threatened by deforestation and hunting. Click here for more orangutan photos. (credit:Getty)
Koala (04 of16)
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A baby joey koala at Sydney's Wildlife World. Though koalas are Australia's most iconic and adored marsupials, they are under threat due to a shortage of suitable habitat from mass land clearance. (credit:Getty Images)
Gorilla Mother And Son(05 of16)
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A 15-year-old female mountain gorilla holds her five month old son at the Kahuzi Biega Nature Park in Democratic Republic of Congo in May 2004. Only 700 mountain gorillas are left in the world, and over half live in central Africa. (credit:AP)
African Penguins(06 of16)
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Endangered Tiger Cubs(07 of16)
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South Korea's Black Bears (08 of16)
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Madagascar Lemur(09 of16)
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Red Pandas(10 of16)
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Lin Hui(11 of16)
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China's panda is one of the world's most beloved but endangered animals. Lin Hui, a female Panda- on a ten-year loan from China - eats bamboo at Chiang Mai Zoo in Thailand in Sept 2005. Captive pandas are notoriously poor breeders. (credit:AP)
South East Asian Monkey(12 of16)
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Night Monkey(13 of16)
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A grey-bellied Night Monkey born in captivity climbs onto his mother's arms at the Santa Fe Zoo, in Medellin, Colombia. The Night Monkey is an endangered species. (credit:Getty Images)
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Elephants(15 of16)
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Polar Bears(16 of16)
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