View allAll Photos Tagged treefrogs
Piedras Blancas NP, Puntarenas Province, Costa Rica
Southern Pacific Lowlands
Hourglass Treefrog [Dendropsophus ebraccatus]
AMPHIBIA > ANURA > Hylidae
The first mating pair of Gray Treefrogs at the old cement pond this year . . . many more will come! :^)
Click for better view with Black Magic, or Press L to view in the LightBox
The tree frog, with its length of 5 cm, the smallest native frog species. Leaves in April his hole in the ground. (Photo: In my garden)
Der Laubfrosch ist mit seinen 5 cm Länge die kleinste heimische Froschart. Verlässt erst im April seine Erdhölen. Fortpflanzungsbereite Tiere tauchen dann an vegetationsreichen Gewässern auf. Tagsüber halten sie sich recht unbeweglich auf Blättern und Ästen auf. (Foto: In meinem Garten)
I'm glad to be back to flickr after a month away -will catch up with you all soon!
Has been Explored -thank you all!
The front door of my house has a wooden storm door that, like me, has warped slightly over the years.
The warp in the door has created a narrow gap, and a few weeks ago, a tree frog moved in.
Atop the storm door he sits, snuggled into the narrow gap between it and the jam. He's there first thing in the morning and he's there when I turn out the lights at night, and when you open and close the door, he goes along for the ride.
My warped storm door is this little creature's entire world.
Healthy Gray treefrog at Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge.
Credit: Zachary Cava/USFWS
Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge is part of the Eastern Massachusetts National Wildlife Refuge Complex.
I spotted this frog while I was getting the lawn mower from the shed. Ileft him alone , he had a go spot for spiders and other bugs to feed on.
Pyramid Mountain Natural Historic Area
Morris County, New Jersey
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Unauthorized use or reproduction for any reason is prohibited
Los Padres National Forest, Calif.- Pacific treefrog on Portero John Creek. Image taken on July 23, 2019. Photo by Hazel Rodriguez/USFWS.
Extreme macro of a frothy green treefrog tympanum using the 90mm f3.5 combined with the MC-20 2x teleconverter
The Green Treefrog (Hyla Cinerea) is one of Florida’s native treefrog species. They are usually bright green with a white stripe that extends along the side of their body. When resting their body color can vary from yellow to gray. They are found in wet prairies, cypress swamps, and the borders of lakes and streams. They were once commonly found on windows sills of houses at night, but more recently they have been displaced by the invasive Cuban Treefrog (Osteopilus septentrionalis).
Photographed with a Canon EOS 7D Mark II, Canon Macro Ring Lite MR-14EX, Sigma 150mm f/2.8 EX DG APO HSM Macro Lens, and Tamron 1.4x AF Teleconverter. At the Green Cay Wetlands, Boynton Beach, Florida, USA.
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/7.1 @ 1/1000 sec. ISO 450.
Novotel Rockford, Palm Cove, Queensland, Australia.
Litoria infrafrenata.
The white-lipped treefrog is Australia's largest native frog growing up to 14 cm. Ranging in colour from pure green to greenish-brown or pale brown, it has a brilliant white stripe that runs along its lower jaw and the side of its head. During the breeding season some have a salmon-pink coloration on their arms and legs. The tadpoles are dark brown with a single cream stripe on each side of the head, body and tail.
The white-lipped treefrog is found in north-east Queensland and Papua New Guinea. Generally found in low-lying coastal areas, it also lives in closed forests, heathland swamps, dry sclerophyll forests, teatree swamps, mangroves and in urban gardens and parks.