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  2. Poison dart frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poison_dart_frog

    Poison dart frog (also known as dart-poison frog, poison frog or formerly known as poison arrow frog) is the common name of a group of frogs in the family Dendrobatidae which are native to tropical Central and South America. [2] These species are diurnal and often have brightly colored bodies.

  3. Poison dart frogs are small, brightly colored amphibians that live on tropical rainforest floors across Central and South America. They are members of the family Dendrobatidae, and there are...

  4. Poison Dart Frog | Species | WWF - World Wildlife Fund

    www.worldwildlife.org/species/poison-dart-frog

    The frog's skin secretes a dangerous poison that can paralyze and even kill predators. There are more than 100 species of poison dart frogs, including those that live in the Amazon. Climate change and habitat loss threaten their survival.

  5. Poison Dart Frogs: Facts, Threats, and Conservation - IFAW

    www.ifaw.org/animals/poison-dart-frogs

    Found in Central and South America, poison dart frogs (also known as poison arrow frogs) are small amphibians known for their bright colors. They are so named because indigenous tribes used to collect the frogs’ poison and apply it to the tips of their arrows and darts before hunting.

  6. Poison Dart Frogs - National Geographic

    www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/amphibians/facts/poison-dart-frogs-1

    Poison dart frogs, members of the Dendrobatidae family, wear some of the most brilliant and beautiful colors on Earth. Depending on individual habitats, which extend from the tropical forests of...

  7. Poison frog, (family Dendrobatidae), any of approximately 180 species of New World frogs characterized by the ability to produce extremely poisonous skin secretions. Poison frogs inhabit the forests of the New World tropics from Nicaragua to Peru and Brazil, and a few species are used by South

  8. There are approximately 170 species of frogs considered “poison dart frogs,” and they come in a large variety of shapes, sizes, colors, and patterns. The poisonous species are equipped with bright colors and bold patterns to warn predators of their toxicity, but not all of these frogs are poisonous!

  9. Poison frogs - Smithsonian's National Zoo

    nationalzoo.si.edu/animals/poison-frogs

    Poison frogs, also called poison arrow and poison dart frogs, are the most brightly colored frogs in the world. They live in wet, tropical forests in Central and South America where their diet contributes to the toxins they secrete through their skin.

  10. The common name, dart-poison frogs, is derived from a practice of the Indians of the Ember Choco in Colombia, in which they rub their blowgun darts onto the backs of Phyllobates terribilis to load the darts with poison (Myers et al., 1978). Dendrobatids are ant and mite specialists, and some researchers have argued that their skin toxins are ...

  11. Poison Dart Frog - Rainforest Alliance

    www.rainforest-alliance.org/species/poison-dart-frog

    Poison dart frogs are one of the planet’s most brightly colored animals. Depending on the species, they can be yellow, copper, gold, red, blue, green, black or a combination of those colors. Their showy colors and startling designs help warn predators of the danger they impose—a defense mechanism known as “aposematic coloration.”