View allAll Photos Tagged treefrogs
Squirrel treefrog (Hyla squirella) in a trumpet pitcher plant leaf
Size: Usually 1 to 1.5 in.
Identification: Body is tan, green, gray, or brown, and may be marked with splotches; skin is smooth. Upper lip is often yellowish on bright green individuals. Sides may be marked with broken, whitish stripes. Like other treefrogs, this species has enlarged, sticky toepads. Squirrel Treefrogs are often distinguished from other similar species by process of elimination.
Breeding:March to August; lays eggs singly or in pairs on the substrate or attached to vegetation. Call is raspy and somewhat duck-like. To hear frog calls, visit the USGS Frog Call Lookup and select the species you want to hear from the common name drop-down list.
Diet: Ants, beetles, crickets, spiders, termites, and other small invertebrates.
Habitats: Found throughout Florida and in the Keys on buildings and in shrubs and trees in urbanized and natural areas, including hardwood hammocks, bottomland and floodplain forests and swamps, pine-oak forests, and pine flatwoods. Overwinters in groups under loose bark and in tree holes. Breeds in shallow, temporary pools of water that lack fish, including marshes, wet flatwoods, and flooded ditches; prefers open wetlands.
Gray Treefrog
Scientific name:
Hyla chrysoscelis and Hyla versicolor
Features:
Gray treefrogs are Missouri’s most common species of treefrog. Two species of gray treefrogs occur in Missouri: Cope’s gray treefrog, Hyla chrysoscelis, and the eastern gray treefrog, Hyla versicolor. There is always a large, white marking below each eye. Large, adhesive toe pads are present on fingers and toes.
Color:
May be gray, greenish-gray or brown. Bright green specimens are
often seen. The inside of each hind leg is washed with yellow-orange.
Size:
Average from 1 ¼ to 2 inches in head-body length.
Habitat:
Forest-dwelling
Breeding:
Late May and early June in fishless, woodland ponds.
Call:
These two species are nearly identical in appearance and are best separated by their calls. Cope’s gray treefrog sounds like a buzzer, while the eastern gray treefrog has a birdlike, musical trill.
Information Taken from:
Hyla versicolor complex (versicolor or chrysoscelis), Sparta, Monroe County Wisconsin, 10 August 2019.
I'm a little confused as to whether this is P.braueri or P.megacephalus. I believe they might be the same frog just being reshuffled between species.
Cuban Treefrog (Osteopilus septentrionalis)
Largest tree frog found in North America. Native to the Caribbean, Cuban treefrogs are considered an invasive exotic species here in Florida.
Comments and feedback welcome.
I know frogs are not as popular as bugs, this isn't one of my usual subjects, and this isn't one of my best photos, but this little frog was just too nice to pass up.
I found him/her hopping from leaf to leaf on the side of the trail I was walking on. It was probably less than an inch long (this was taken with the 135mm on a few extension tubes, and cropped quite a bit) and was a beautiful bright green color that the flash destroyed somewhat.
I have never seen a frog like this, usually I just see brownish toads around, I've never seen a tree frog. Is it even a tree frog? Anyone know the species?
Hyla cinerea, North Carolina. I never used to hear or see this species in the piedmont, however I have been hearing them near the house starting this spring.
Morris County, New Jersey
A perpetual favorite of wildlife enthusiasts, these small amphibians exude charisma.. and also a loud bird-like call. It's hard to have a bad day after viewing one up close.
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In a restroom instead of a tree.
With the Sabino Canyon Volunteer Naturalists on February 18 2015. www.sabinonaturalists.org/walkshikesdemos/
It's only February, but Spring is here! (Of course, as always in Arizona subject to changes in the weather.) Lots of flowers are starting to bloom, there are butterflies out, the lizzards are beginning to appear and the creek is running.
RAW file processed with Olympus Viewer 3.
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Gray Treefrog in our garden. Since putting in a little pond we've had at least two species of frogs show up. I think these are my favorite because in the spring, when the night time temperatures begin to average 65 they start breeding and their conversation is such a wonderful ruckus! My complete photo archive is available here.
I took a young Malaysian intern from a university in Pingtung to nearby Dahanshan. Hoping to find a hundred pacer snake, we were lucky to find several other endemics, including this female brown treefrog (Buergeria robusta).
One of 4 very young Green Treefrogs found on a low lying bush outside my campgrounds washroom in Central Florida
press - L - to see it large and on black.
press - F - if you like it :)
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Click here to see a set with some of my favorite shots :)
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