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Wisconsin status Picture American bullfrog: Lithobates catesbeianus: Least concern Common Blanchard's cricket frog: Acris blanchardi: Not assessed Endangered Boreal chorus frog: Pseudacris maculata: Least concern Common Cope's gray treefrog: Dryophytes chrysoscelis: Least concern Common Gray treefrog: Dryophytes versicolor: Least concern Common ...
The pickerel frog ranges in the west from much they are of Wisconsin, southeast Minnesota, eastern Iowa, through Missouri and down to eastern Texas.To the east they extend through northern Louisiana, most of Mississippi, northern Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina to the coast.
The boreal chorus frog (Pseudacris maculata) is a species of chorus frog native to Canada from central Quebec to eastern British Columbia and north to the Northwest Territories and the southern portion of the Yukon. [2] It occurs in the USA throughout Montana, northwestern Wisconsin, northeastern Arizona, northern New Mexico, and southwestern Utah.
The spring peeper is a tan or brown frog with a dark cross on its dorsa (thus the Latin name crucifer, meaning cross-bearer [7]), though sometimes the marking may be indistinct. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Dark lines can also be found between the eyes and in a crossband on the hindlimbs of P. crucifer . [ 10 ]
Blanchard's cricket frog (Acris blanchardi) is a species of frog in the family Hylidae. It is a small, dark colored frog that is threatened or endangered in Michigan , Wisconsin , and Minnesota . Studies have been done to see why the population of the frog is beginning to decrease in those states.
Henry Vilas Zoo is a 28-acre (11 ha) public zoo in Madison, Wisconsin, United States, that is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA). Owned by Dane County , the zoo receives over 750,000 visitors annually.
Gray tree frog on an apple tree, central US. 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.
Hodag "captured" by Eugene Shepard, 1893 E. S. Shepard, circa 1915 E. S. Shepard's residence in Rhinelander, Wisconsin, the den is to the right where he kept the Hodag The Hodag In American folklore , the hodag is a fearsome critter resembling a large bull-horned carnivore with a row of thick curved spines down its back.