View allAll Photos Tagged TreeFrog
Litoria bicolor
A beautiful little tree frog around 3cm in length. Photographed in Northern Queensland, Australia.
My website - goo.gl/xIQueb
Tucson, Arizona
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Gray Treefrogs are essentially identical to Cope’s Gray Treefrogs. The only way to tell the difference is to listen to their breeding calls.
Designed by: Satoshi Kamiya
Folded from a 50x50cm sheet of double tissue paper
This is my second attempt in making the model. In my first attempt i used two glued sheets of ORIGAMIDO paper and i realized that the glue added to thickness of the paper.
Even though i used worse paper this time, I'm pretty impressed with the result
an uncut square of lokta
20 cm x 20 cm = 7 cm
wetfolded + mc
made it the size of a real tree frog
folded by Vinh Truong
Designed by Robert j Lang
Gray Treefrog in our garden. Since putting in a little pond we've had at least two species of frogs show up. I think these are my favorite because in the spring, when the night time temperatures begin to average 65 they start breeding and their conversation is such a wonderful ruckus! My complete photo archive is available here.
I was in my backyard birding right before the sun went down when I spotted this little guy in the hedgerow at the back of the property. I had to stick my head in the branches to get the shot. This really made my day! When I lived in Illinois I hunted these for years with no luck. Greenville County, South Carolina
The Marbled Treefrog (Dendropsophus marmoratus) is a nocturnal and arboreal species, usually in trees, but after heavy rains males call from the ground, grasses, herbaceous vegetation, or bushes around temporary ponds (Rodríguez and Duellman, 1994).
Rodríguez, L. O., & Duellman, W. E. (1994). Guide to the frogs of the Iquitos region, Amazonian Peru. Asociación de Ecología y Conservación.