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  2. List of Anuran families - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Anuran_families

    This list of Anuran families shows all extant families of Anura. Anura is an order of animals in the class Amphibia that includes frogs and toads. More than 5,000 species are described in the order. The living anurans are typically divided into three suborders: Archaeobatrachia, Mesobatrachia, and Neobatrachia. This classification is based on ...

  3. Ranoidea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranoidea

    The family of Ranixalidae (leaping frogs) has one genus containing 10 different species. They can be found in central and southern India. They can be found in central and southern India. They typically reside in leaf litter and in tropical deciduous forests , near streams and can be found between 200 m and 1100 m in altitude.

  4. Glass frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_frog

    The family Centrolenidae was proposed by Edward H. Taylor in 1945. Between the 1950s and 1970s, most species of glass frogs were known from Central America , particularly from Costa Rica and Panama , where Taylor, Julia F., and Jay M. Savage extensively worked, and just a few species were known to occur in South America .

  5. Neobatrachia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neobatrachia

    The Neobatrachia (Neo-Latin neo-("new") + batrachia ("frogs")) are a suborder of the Anura, the order of frogs and toads.. This suborder is the most advanced and apomorphic of the three anuran suborders alive today, hence its name, which literally means "new frogs" (from the hellenic words neo, meaning "new" and batrachia, meaning "frogs").

  6. Little grass frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Grass_Frog

    P. ocularis The little Grass Frog breeds in shallow, fish free wetlands, including cypress domes, marshes, bogs, wet prairies, wet flatwoods, and floodplain forests [10] generally breeds from January to September in most of their range, but can breed year-round in Florida. Females can generally reproduce more than once per annual cycle.

  7. True frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_frog

    True frogs is the common name for the frog family Ranidae. They have the widest distribution of any frog family. They are abundant throughout most of the world, occurring on all continents except Antarctica. The true frogs are present in North America, northern South America, Europe, Africa (including Madagascar), and Asia.

  8. Nanohyla annamensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanohyla_annamensis

    Nanohyla annamensis, commonly known as the Annam chorus frog, Annam narrow-mouthed frog, Vietnam rice frog or minute narrow-mouthed frog, is a species of frog in the family Microhylidae. It is found in Cambodia , Laos , Thailand , and Vietnam .

  9. Brown banana frog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_Banana_Frog

    These frogs have a light to dark brown with a silverish white pattern. These patterns can include a triangle on the tip of the snout, a big stripe leading to the groin, a light spot in the lumbar region, and/or 2 light spots on the tibia.