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  2. Wood frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_frog

    The wood frog has a complex lifecycle that depends on multiple habitats, damp lowlands, and adjacent woodlands. Their habitat conservation is, therefore, complex, requiring integrated, landscape-scale preservation. [1] Wood frog development in the tadpole stage is known to be negatively affected by road salt contaminating freshwater ecosystems ...

  3. Cope's gray treefrog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cope's_gray_treefrog

    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]

  4. Limnonectes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limnonectes

    Most species (e.g. Blyth's river frog L. blythii or the fanged river frog L. macrodon) develop normally, with free-swimming tadpoles that eat food. [5] The tadpoles of the corrugated frog (L. laticeps) are free-swimming but endotrophic, meaning they do not eat but live on stored yolk until metamorphosis into frogs. [5]

  5. Papurana daemeli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papurana_daemeli

    [1] [2] It is the only ranid frog found in Australia. [3] In Australia, the species is restricted to the rainforest of northern Queensland and the eastern border of Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory. In Australia, it is usually known as wood frog [4] [5] [6] (though in North America this would refer to Lithobates sylvaticus) or sometimes ...

  6. Frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frog

    A few of the larger ones may eat other frogs, small mammals and reptiles, and fish. [160] [161] A few species also eat plant matter; the tree frog Xenohyla truncata is partly herbivorous, its diet including a large proportion of fruit, floral structures and nectar.

  7. Cuban tree frogs will grow to the size of a human hand, eat ...

    www.aol.com/cuban-tree-frogs-grow-size-090121180...

    They will even eat smaller tree frogs. There's at least some anecdotal evidence from Florida that they actually can reduce populations of native frogs. If we want to have some native wildlife left ...

  8. Rana amurensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rana_amurensis

    Rana amurensis (Khabarovsk frog, Siberian wood frog, Heilongjiang brown frog or Amur brown frog) is a species of true frog found in northern Asia. Rana coreana was previously included in this species as a subspecies.

  9. What animals eat cicadas? - AOL

    www.aol.com/animals-eat-cicadas-085337093.html

    Mammals and birds, amphibians and reptiles, and fish all eat cicadas — and benefit from the glut of them. What do cicadas eat?: Trillions of cicadas to emerge in the United States.