View allAll Photos Tagged graytreefrog
I noticed the eyes and mouth looking leaf person to the left of the Gray Tree Frog when I was reviewing my shots. It amused me :) "Oh - Nooooooo"
I know he's looking away from the camera but I still liked this shot, you get a really good look at the patterns on his back.
Photographed on my property in central Oklahoma, on 22 May 2019.
Photographs and text © Bryan Reynolds
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This little gray tree frog apparently preferred the old rough wood of our house to the smooth bark of the nearby birches yesterday. A couple of inches in length.
I found this little guy on the side of the house outside my bedroom window. He's an Indiana Gray Treefrog.
Gray Tree Frog seen in other photos - this is just closer. I love his eye ...they look like a dinosaur's eye.
Big Oaks National Wildlife Refuge, Indiana taken with a Canon Powershot SX30IS. f/4.5, 1/60sec., ISO-80
Male Gray Treefrog, Dryophytes versicolor, changing color when placed upon a green plant in central Michigan, USA
Wetlands are home to many species, including this gray treefrog, which was found at Ontario Nature’s Lawson Nature Reserve. The vast majority of wetlands in Southern Ontario have disappeared since the 1970’s from rapid urbanization and changing land use. Though the gray treefrog can be found extensively across Southern Ontario, its status has not been assessed by the Committee on the Status of Species at Risk in Ontario. To learn more about the gray treefrog, follow this link: www.ontarionature.org/protect/species/reptiles_and_amphib.... To learn more about the Lawson Nature Reserve, click on this link: www.ontarionature.org/protect/habitat/lawson.php.
Taken on May 26th, 2008. The next day, Toad was gone. I left Maine on May 28th and so far, he hasn't returned.
I am about to return to Maine tomorrow for an extended stay. I'm hoping he might hop back onto the porch to say hello while I'm there.
The Gray Tree Frog (Hyla versicolor), written more commonly as one word as Gray Treefrog, is a species of small arboreal frog native to much of the eastern United States.
It is sometimes referred to as the Eastern Gray Treefrog or Common Gray Treefrog or Tetraploid Gray Treefrog. It may sometimes be referred to as the North American Tree Frog
~My backyard in Central Oklahoma