Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Blanchard's cricket frog: Acris blanchardi: Least concern, endangered in Minnesota Cope's gray treefrog: Hyla chrysoscelis: Least concern: Gray treefrog: Hyla versicolor: Least concern: Spring peeper: Pseudacris crucifer: Least concern: Boreal chorus frog: Pseudacris maculata: Least concern: Bullfrog: Lithobates catesbeianus: Least concern ...
The diet of Cope's gray treefrog primarily consists of insects such as moths, mites, spiders, plant lice, and harvestmen. Snails have also been observed as a food source. Like most frogs, Dryophytes chrysocelis is an opportunistic feeder and may also eat smaller frogs, including other treefrogs. [24]
C. Ceiba stream frog; Charadrahyla esperancensis; Charadrahyla pinorum; Charadrahyla sakbah; Charadrahyla tecuani; Chinamococh stream frog; Cloud forest stream frog
American green tree frog: Hyla cinerea: 1993 [10] Minnesota: Northern leopard frog: Rana pipiens: Proposed in 1999 [11] Missouri: American bullfrog: Rana catesbeiana: 2005 [12] New Hampshire: Red-spotted newt: Notophthalmus viridescens: 1985 [13] New Jersey: Pine Barrens tree frog: Dryophytes andersonii: 2018 [14] New Mexico: New Mexico ...
The Red-eyed Tree Frog (Litoria chloris) is a species of tree frog native to eastern Australia; ranging from north of Sydney to Proserpine in mid-northern Queensland. These frogs typically reach a size of 65 millimetres (2.6 in). Its skin secretions have been found to destroy HIV, without harming healthy T cells.
The gray treefrog (Dryophytes versicolor) is a species of small arboreal holarctic tree frog native to much of the eastern United States and southeastern Canada. [ 2 ] It is sometimes referred to as the eastern gray treefrog , northern gray treefrog , [ 3 ] common gray treefrog , or tetraploid gray treefrog to distinguish it from its more ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Tree frogs are members of these families or genera: Hylidae, or "true" treefrogs, occur in the temperate to tropical parts of Eurasia north of the Himalayas, Australia and the Americas. Rhacophoridae, or shrub frogs, are the treefrogs of tropical regions around the Indian Ocean: Africa, South Asia and Southeast Asia east to Lydekker's line.