View allAll Photos Tagged treefrogs

The squirrel treefrog ranges in color from brown to yellow-green to green. It is one to one and a half inches long. It gets its names from its squirrel-like call.

Common Tree Frog (Polypedates leucomystax); length approx. 6 cm / 2.4 inches.

This cutie had found a nice spot to spend the day. If he hadn't been green I would never have seen him!

Pseudacris regilla. Found in the Kalmiopsis Wilderness in the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest, Oregon.

Napping with one eye open high up on an arbor where he thought no one would notice.

© Jim Gilbert 2014 all rights reserved

 

Youngest one I've found. It still has some tail showing.

 

New Jersey Audubon Scherman Hoffman sanctuary, Bernardsville

Bolivian pampa

The biggest one I ever saw.

myplace

brooksville, florida

這張沒打閃燈,算是最接近自然的原色吧~

An endemic species to Taiwan, now protected by law.

not sure about i.d; squirrel? in flooded saw palmetto bordering pines at the Wilderness Preserve at Myakka River State Park in Sarasota, Florida

Pseudacris cadaverina

3 Jun 2020

CA, SBE Co., Cajon Creek

ENG - Palmar Treeforg (Boana pellucens).

 

ESP - Rana arbórea de Palmmar (Boana pellucens).

 

Ecuador.

攝於雲林斗六.

A frog species endemic to Taiwan.

Trachycephalus typhonius

 

Hotel Luna Azul, Guanacaste, Costa Rica.

My wife, daughters, and a couple of friends visited a yard in search of a selasphorus hummingbird. We didn't get any photos of that individual but my kids still found a few critters to look at.

this little guy is only 4cm wide

Map Treefrog (Boana geographicus ) close to Yasuni National Park, Ecuador Amazon Basin.

 

Rana Geografica (Boana geographicus ) cerca al Parque Nacional Yasuni, amazonia ecuatoriana.

Hyla versicolor - We found it in our home in Carmel, New York. For this photo we put it in a small dish then we took it outside to a nearby pond, where it hopped away.

To see how the same frog looked outside follow this link:

www.flickr.com/gp/sue_10512/1Z1R84

from Reserva Ecológica Tamandua, Ecuador (open to researchers, birdwatchers and photographers): www.yanacocharescue.org/tamandua-ecologic-reserve, additional photos at www.flickr.com/andreaskay/sets/72157671181153332

How I found this adorable little Tree Frog. A "shady" spot on a hot summer day. :)

A smiling Gray Treefrog.

They are found in the eastern half of the United States.

According to Tn Watchable Wildlife they are a tree-dwelling species that is rarely on the ground.

It has sticky toe pads to help in clinging to tree bark and other surfaces.

They can change color depending on where they are (in a tree, on the ground) or if they are cold. The underside of their thigh is a yellow-orange.

The Common Tree Frog, Four-lined Tree Frog, or Striped Tree Frog (Polypedates leucomystax) is a species in the shrub frog family (Rhacophoridae). Many past authors have united it with the Common Indian Tree Frog in P. maculatus (or Rhacophorus maculatus, as was common in older times), but today they are generally distinct species. In its native range, it is also called "white-lipped tree frog" but this name is otherwise applied to a species of true tree frogs (family Hylidae).

 

It is found in Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, the Philippines, Singapore, North America, Thailand, Vietnam, and possibly Bhutan.

 

Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry forests, subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, subtropical or tropical moist montane forests, subtropical or tropical moist shrubland, subtropical or tropical seasonally wet or flooded lowland grassland, rivers, intermittent rivers, freshwater lakes, intermittent freshwater lakes, freshwater marshes, intermittent freshwater marches, freshwater springs, rocky shores, coastal freshwater lagoons, arable land, pastureland, plantations, rural gardens, urban areas, water storage areas, ponds, aquaculture ponds, irrigated land, seasonally flooded agricultural land, and introduced vegetation.

  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

A few glamor shots of a little Gray Treefrog I saw earlier this month. I love finding these guys and getting a few photos but their camouflage is just so good. I am sure I am missing many more than I am seeing.

(Triprion spinosus aka Anotheca spinosa) Costa Rica 2020.

Brown-thighed treefrog, (Scanix funerea), found in the Peruvian Amazon

Phrynohyas venulosa

 

A handsome adult from the tropical forests of Belize.

Photo from Udzungwa national park, Tanzania.

(Scinax boulengeri) Costa Rica 2020.

Hylidae: Agalychnis callidryas

Red webbed treefrog

Rana arbicola patiroja

Christian Sanchez Photography

Es una rana arbórea nocturna que habita los bosques húmedos y húmedos de las tierras bajas cerca de las piscinas rocosas poco profundas, y los bancos de la corriente. Puede sobrevivir en el bosque secundario, pero generalmente necesita una buena cobertura vegetal. En Costa Rica, se ha observado en áreas relativamente abiertas.

Pugnosed Treefrog

Rana arboricola ñata

(smilisca sila )

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