Of the several, unrelated anuran taxa that feed underground, the Neotropical pipoid, Rhinophrynus dorsalis, seems to be the most specialized ant‐ and termite‐feeder. The snout is covered with a curious and apparently unique epidermal armour. The buccal and oesophageal linings are ornately folded. The lips effect a double closure along the long, wedgeshaped, edentate maxillary arch. Peculiar submandibular glands seem to enhance the seal of the lips. The results of morphological, cinematographic, and muscle stimulation studies reveal that Rhinophrynus has a mechanism of tongue protrusion basically distinct from that of other frogs that project their tongues by means of a lingual flip. In Rhinophrynus, the intrinsic tongue muscles act to stiffen the organ, exerting hydrostatic pressure on the fluid contents of the lingual sinus. Actual protrusion of the tongue through the buccal groove involves shifting the organ forward via protraction of the hyoid by muscles extrinsic to the tongue—a mode that is unique among anurans and one highly suited for securing small insect prey in subterranean burrows.