View allAll Photos Tagged TreeFrog
We found three gray treefrogs in the pool yesterday afternoon. I continue in my quest to get a picture of the yellow underside of their legs...
Rogers, Benton County, Arkansas, USA
Thanks to Adaire for letting me photograph her froggies at Ecology Camp.
Or, in this case, window frog. I spotted this little one high up on a window at the local strip mall. I'm guessing it's either a green treefrog (Hyla cinerea) or a squirrel treefrog (Hyla squirella).
Marla startled this pacific tree frog who was hiding in the grass in WIldcat Canyon, Contra Costa County. He accommodated me with this photogenic pose log enough to get a couple of shots.
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© Cherie Bosela || Facebook || www.CherieBosela.com
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Osteopilus brunneus, (Jamaican laughing treefrog) sub-adult on Bromeliad leaf at night. Westmorland, Jamaica.
I went exploring in the woods looking for mushrooms and came across this little guy, he wasn't a mushroom! lol
He didn't mind the attention either.
He had pretty yellow on his underside, but you can't see it in the picture.
After looking it up, I found he is a gray tree frog either the Hyla chrysoscelis or the Hyla versicolor.
He posed nicely for me!
The green treefrog is one of Oklahoma’s most distinctive frogs. This moderately large treefrog has a slender body and smooth skin that is bright green. Another distinctive feature is a white or light yellow lateral line outlined in gray that extends from below the eye to the groin.
A slender treefrog (Litoria adelaidensis) is adhered to a Baumea stipe by suction-padded toes, hiding in a comfortable bed of sedges and rushes in a frog pond at the Environment House . ecoshop (www.environmenthouse.org.au/about-environment-house.php).