View allAll Photos Tagged treefrogs
Yellow Treefrog
Rana Arboricola Amarilla
Dendropsophus Microphalus
christian sanchez photography
costa rica
Scinax staufferi, Toledo district, Belize. I accidentally posted this one as an Olive-snouted Treefrog, but it's not, my bad!
Hyla gratiosa
An adult male calling among a large chorus after a passing thunderstorm in Alachua County, Florida.
While cleaning out "Gertrude" our pool cleaning BOT, i saw an inconspicuous blob on the black fence. the blob was gray and i thought it was a wasp nest and made a note to clean it off after dark. the next time i looked up, the "nest" was looking back at me with a sleepy eye! upon closer inspection i saw it was a frog of some undetermined type...one i had certainly never seen before...inside i went and out came the camera. got a couple shots and let it be. when my son in law came home i told him i found a most unusual frog, and took him to see it...he was fascinated and picked it up, and it stuck to him with cool suction cup feet!!! we played with it a bit and then he decided it's name would be Gypsy and we would keep it so i could take it to school to show the kids. Gypsy had her adventure today, visiting classrooms, where i was able to tell the kids that she was a Common Gray Treefrog, is nocturnal, stays mainly in the trees, but comes down to get bugs for meals. they eat small crickets, grasshoppers and worms, and make sounds that are similar to a bird. i set Gypsy free tonight, in the ornamental cherry tree in one of my gardens. i swear she smiled for her picture!!
This little guy was not much over an inch long and was making himself right at home on some backyard patio furniture.
Green Treefrog (Hala cinerea).
Village Creek Drying Beds. Fort Worth and Arlington, Texas.
Tarrant County. July 22, 2021.
Nikon D500. Nikkor AF-S 300mm f/4E ED PF VR + TC-14e III teleconverter.
(420mm) f/6.3 @ 1/1000 sec. ISO 500.
© Jim Gilbert 2009 all rights reserved
While photographing a different tree frog on a tree I heard something hit the ground nearby. I don't know why, but I had the idea that it might be another tree frog, so I searched around and found it. While I was trying to get a photo the frog jumped up on my flash. This guy stuck around for quite a while.
G9 pocketcam, BTW.
Scherman-Hoffman Audubon, Bernardsville, NJ
This is a typical Gray Treefrog, Hyla versicolor. We found it on a sunny hillside in rural farmland.
A tree frog designed by Robert Lang folded by me from a square of double tissue paper. I made a blog post about it www.origami-brasil.com/2020/04/a-ra-e-os-enxertos-no-orig... (pt-br)
Hyla andersonii from North Carolina. These small treefrogs are poorly known. They're known from three disjunct populations - one the the New Jersey pine barrens, one in the sandhills region of North Carolina and South Carolina, and one around the Florida/Alabama border. They specialize by breeding in/around seepage bogs during the early summer, though little else is known about their reproduction. Much of their habitat has been destroyed by draining for agriculture and development or degraded by fire suppression.
These little guys are the ones that make the "ribbit" sound used in movies that call for frog sounds. This is the only shot I managed of this frog (around the size of my thumbnail) before I got distracted by a fence lizard and the frog made its escape.