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Mating call / mating chorus of the gray tree frog (Hyla versicolor) and a pair of mating tree frogs.
What do the calls of a Gray Tree Frog sound like? In this post, you will learn HOW to identify the common noises that these frogs make!
Tree frogs are able to make sound by allowing airflow to go via the lungs, past the larynx, and into the mouth, causing the vocal cords to osculate. The vocal muscles can make up fifteen percent of a frog’s body mass.
The sound of a Green Tree Frog (aka White's Tree Frog) calling in tropical northern Australia.
Audio recording of American green tree frog, Everglades National Park, Florida.
Some of the most familiar noises produced by tree frogs include the sound of spring peepers (which have smaller toe pads and don’t spend much time in trees), calls of gray tree frogs, and the sounds of the Pacific Tree Frog.
We currently have calls for eleven species of frogs. Click on the thumbnails below to view enlargements of the photographs and to hear calls. Photographs and sound recordings produced by the US Geological Survey, Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center.
Listen to the bewitching tones of the Pig Frog, Dwarf Mexican Treefrog, Little Green Toad, Southwestern Woodhouse's Toad, Great Basin Spadefoot, and other unsung heroes of the bog creek.
Once you know what to listen for, they are easy to identify by sound. Their mating calls sound like a loud, musical, bird-like trill. Calls typically last about half a second and are repeated...
Learn the calls of the gray tree frog, and to understand the differences between Cope's Gray Tree Frog and Eastern Gray Tree Frog sounds.