View allAll Photos Tagged TreeFrog
Also known as a Pacific Chorus Frog or a Pacific Green Treefrog. Pseudacris regilla.
Near Bend, Oregon
The sellers of the house told us that sometimes they would get a treefrog in or near the hot tub.
I shrugged it off and figured they were talking about a Leopard Frog or something.
Then l I saw this little guy a few days ago! He hides under the cover and has been here for awhile. I wish I could get more to come!
He's hiding in this photo.
I found this very tiny treefrog on a blade of grass. His/her tadpole tail is still showing. It is likely either a Gray Treefrog, Green Treefrog, or Spring Peeper. All three species can be green at this stage. Impossible for me to be sure which one it is when they are this young. West Friendship Park, Maryland
Bird-voiced (Hyla avivoca, left), hybrid, and Gray Treefrog (H. chrysoscelis, right). Choctawhatchee River, FL.
Myakka River State Park, south of Sarasota (Florida) was teeming with wildlife during the winter i spent there ('01-02). Birds, gators, anoles, snakes, deer, frogs... there was something interesting around every bend. I caught this little one late in the day on a dark forest trail: 105 mm macro lens, tripod. Scanned from the original Fujichrome Velvia slide, November 2001.
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Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Hylidae
Genus: Dendropsophus
Species: Dendropsophus microcephalus
Lamanai, Belize
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Welcome to my Flickr 365 Project! I’m calling it my 365 Species Project, because for each day of the year, I will post a photo of a different species of organism... My goal was to accomplish all of this in 2013, but I soon found out that it was more daunting a task than I'd realized. Instead, my new goal is to get through 365 by the end of 2014, still an impressive average of a new species every other day for two years.
This is one of the largest species of treefrogs; it inhabits the Costa and Amazonian regions.
Hypsiboas boans
This photograph is part of the book "Sapos"
Cope's gray tree frog
Thanks to Jason Hoverman, PhD from UC Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
for helping me ID this frog.
The Milkweed was hosting a group of tiny tree frogs. Most were in the shade but a few chose sunny spots. I would think they would not want to be in the heat and sun but they seemed content.
Hyla cinerea. This is a common treefrog species throughout the southeastern US and west to central and south Texas. Their calls, which resemble a repetitive "quank," can be heard regularly throughout the spring and summer around various large and small bodies of fresh water. They are outwardly similar to the Squirrel Treefrog (Hyla squirella), although they tend to get slightly larger and are less apt to call mid-day, as the Squirrel Treefrogs do on humid summer days. During the winter, they often seek refuge in the dark spaces under rotting tree bark, though in warmer parts of their range they might remain active year-round. In the active season, they can often be found in and around wetlands, often clinging to vegetation and remaining out of the sun to avoid dehydration.
This treefrog jumped from very high, and landed right in front of me, Spider-Man style. Scared the crap out of me. He seemed fine, though. Weirdo.
This treefrog lived life on the edge! While driving home from a family member's house I noticed something stuck to the hood of my car. I pulled over to investigate and found this frog hanging on for dear life! I traveled home with it and then released it in a tree in my backyard to find the other frogs but not until a photoshoot was done!