View allAll Photos Tagged treefrogs
Canyon Treefrog. Grant Co., NM. 7/21/2012. A few were found calling in the same pool as the H. wrightorum.
This gray treefrog was quite well camouflaged against the worn trellis, and clearly would be against the wood of a tree, too.
For more frogs and turtles (and other amphibians), please visit: www.flickr.com/photos/cherylmolin/albums/72157679238897658
I caught this little guy in the sunroom on my Kaffir Lime tree. Taken with Canon 20D , 75-300 with extension tubes and an external flash.
Some leaves had baby green tree frogs in them. It was neat to see these native frogs that are rare in my backyard.
As the name implies, these frogs are typically found in very tall trees or other high-growing vegetation. They do not normally descend to the ground, except to mate and spawn some build foam nests on leaves and during their adult lives rarely leave the trees at all.
These treefrogs and toads were all gathered in a pool just off the side of the road in my neighborhood after a torrential downpour from a tropical storm.
fabmo.de/3d-drucker/gedrucker-frosch-die-zweite/
Treefrog from MorenaP
www.thingiverse.com/thing:18479
200 µm layer height
Can't believe it. I hadn't seen a gray treefrog in 60 years - then in a period of five weeks I found two of them! The first one was climbing up my back door. This one was sitting on a leaf along a hiking trail I was walking today.