View allAll Photos Tagged TreeFrog

The scientific name of the California treefrog, Pseudacris cadaverina, refers to the fact that its body is so pale (like a cadaver). This species is most likely to be found in bouldery creeks, where its pale, cryptic coloration blends right in with the rocky backgrounds that it sits on. In this case there were actually four or five frogs all in a line back-to-back; I focused the camera on only one of them. The remaining frogs are directly behind it but not visible at this angle.

 

Angeles National Forest, CA

We spotted this gray treefrog blending in with a sidewalk on hot summer night in St. Louis County, Minnesota.

 

Photo by Courtney Celley/USFWS.

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I love these animals, they're so cute. ^_^ They are Pacific Tree Frogs (Pseudacris regilla)).

 

Taken on August 6th, 2010 on Denman Island, BC, Canada.

Lake Henry

Mahwah, New Jersey

 

Canon PowerShot S90, handheld, utilizing fill flash.

 

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Four-lined Treefrog

Dairy Farm Nature Park

9 January 2021

#CanonImagingAsia #CanonAsia #CanonSingapore #EOSR6

The onboard camera flash fired a focus assist pre-flash which allowed me to focus on this frog in the dark.

Canon Rebel XTi, telephoto, closeup setting

At this breeding pond there was practically a Hyla versicolor on every tree trunk, from Brazoria County, Texas

Rogers, Benton County, Arkansas, USA

 

Thanks to Adaire for letting me photograph her froggies at Ecology Camp.

Fine art drawing of a Waxy Monkey Treefrog (Phyllomedusa Sauvagei).

 

This drawing is based on a photo by Houston Zoo

Relaxing on my hammock at night and I was joined by this frog. Photo taken at the Canopy Lodge in El Valle, Panama.

Rhacophorus prasinatus

20071215 台北四崁水

Found in large calling groups above a stagnant pond at Camel trophy camp. Found during a night hike in Maliau basin.

After it was baked. Ready for painting.

My first Green Treefrog I've ever seen in person. I drove 200 miles just to find one of these and luckily I found two! One of the coolest frogs in Missouri and the color is unmatched.

Little tree frog on the edge of a flower pot.

I looked for a frog all evening, but couldn't find one. When I went out on my front porch, this little guy was there, to my surprise. Took his pix, and then put him in a tree away from my cat.

Plectrohyla dasypus

 

A species listed as critically endangered by the IUCN - it is only found within Cusuco national park, Honduras.

A gray treefrog at the Tennessee Aquarium in Chattanooga, TN.

Hyla andersonii

 

June, 2012. New Jersey.

 

The gem of the New Jersey pine barrens, this beautiful treefrog species is only found here and a few scattered locations in the southeastern United States. The Pine Barrens Treefrog is a denizen of swamps and acid bogs that are scattered across the pinelands. The Pine Barrens Treefrog is listed as a Threatened species in New Jersey.

The result of crayfish population control since summer of 2018

 

youtu.be/ahJe46XR-Bc

night macro...using just a maglight for lighting

Brooksville, Florida

Where: Arambaré, Lagoa dos Patos, Rio Grande do Sul.

 

When: 11/2014.

Hyla versicolor from Brazoria County, Texas

Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge

Discovered this treefrog during a walk around Vinales. This very large frog measured about 15cm in length! Unfortunately it was quite high in a tree: I could take a good picture of its face/eyes...

Hyla punctata (left) and Hyla leucophyllata (right). Mamiraua Reserve, Amazonas, Brazil.

Gray treefrogs breed in May when they move to breeding ponds. Clusters of up to 30 eggs are attached to vegetation near the surface of the water. The eggs hatch in three to six days. Tadpoles transform within two months. Adults reach maturity within two years

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