View allAll Photos Tagged treefrog

I've been hearing these frogs quite a bit recently. I fought my way through branches, spider webs, and mud before reaching them. This frog was the only one I could get a obscured shot at. Maybe next time I can get a photo of one calling, as it's throat bubble is rather impressive.

I've waited a long time to see my first tree frogs in the wild, but aren't they amazing!

Seen in the south of the Netherlands.

Green treefrog hiding on the tree branch

I think this is Trachycephalus (=Phrynohyas) venulosa, the milky or marbled treefrog. It was within the range of the species and is the right color I think. He was quite content to sit on the tip of a log and let me photograph him.

 

Santa Rosa National Park, Costa Rica

 

Shot with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel and Sigma 105mm macro.

 

Tweaked in photoshop

Nouragues, French Guiana

2/7/10

One of the hurricanes blew away the bird feeder that was on this post, and the tree frogs took over.

Common Gray Treefrog on our deck. As I was watching it an ant came by and it ate it.

west point, ms

Cope's treefrogs (Hyla chrysoscelis) are somewhat common in the region where I live. They are seldom seen though unless you look carefully on roads going through habitat on rainy nights.

Hyla versicolor

 

Please give attribution to psychoticnature.com when using this photo.

Rosenberg's treefrog, or Gladiator treefrog (Hypsiboas rosenbergi) on the forest floor at night. Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica.

gray treefrog, photo credit: Joe Crowley courtesy of Ontario Nature

Cape Melville Treefrog (Litoria andiirrmalin)

The camouflage of the Arizona Canyon Treefrog is amazing how it's body matches the surrounding rock textures and colors!

Green Tree Frog

(Hyla cinerea)

 

Happy #WildlifeWednesday! Today we are looking at the squirrel treefrog (Hyla squirella). This little cutie gave our D03-FL field technician quite a surprise during LAI (leaf area index) when she tried to unravel the flag to read it. These tree frogs are always hiding in our flagging. They prefer areas with moisture that provide shelter and food, such as swamps, marshes, edges of lakes and streams, trees, gardens, shrubs, and houses. Squirrel treefrogs can be found all throughout the Southeast and are very common to see at D03’s sites.

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

Young Cuban treefrog (Osteopilus septentrionalis).

 

Location: North Fort Myers, Florida

Status:Wild

Female Osteocephalus taurinus.

 

Where: Upper Madeira River, Porto Velho, Rondônia.

 

When: 11/2010.

Another treefrog from my yard.

Rhacophorus arvalis

20080606 台北四崁水

May 29, 2010. Florida Green Treefrog (Hyla cinerea). Native species

Common Tree Frog (Polypedates leucomystax); body length approx. 4.5 cm / 1.8 inches. These local tree frogs seem to see our house as just another tree...

Convict Treefrog (Hypsiboas calcaratus), Shiripuno Lodge, Ecuador

  

www.tremarctos.com/2018/06/convict-treefrog/

o broscuta cat un deget..

Rhacophorus prasinatus

20080228台北四崁水

myplace

brooksville, florida

Gray tree frog, Saratoga Battlefield National Monument, New York, summer 2006. This guy apparently thought he was well camouflaged. This was the first time I had seen one in it's emerald coloration. It is sitting on a common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca).

Senior High Camp 2016

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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