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Frog Photos
Below are selected pictures of frogs from around the world. More photographs of frogs are available in the country sections found on the left.
Except where noted, all images are the property of Rhett A. Butler, copyright 1994-2004. Contact me with questions regarding use, reproduction, or purchase of any of the pictures.
UPDATED PHOTOS HERE
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Page 1:
Green and black poison dart frog (Dendrobates auratus) |
Blue poison dart frog (Dendrobates azureus) |
Strawberry poison-dart frog in bromeliad |
Yellow-Banded Poison Frog (Dendrobates leucomelas) |
Boophis (?) frog at Andasibe |
Frog in Isalo |
Green Climbing Mantella (Mantella laevigata) |
Mantella madagascariensis frog in Ranomafana |
Mantidactylus pulcher |
Tomato frog |
White's Tree Frog (Litorea caerulea) |
Rainforest frog in leaf litter |
Unknown frog with broad tan and brown bands and blue spots |
Tree frog in the tropical forest of Borneo |
Yellow and brown toad in Sulawesi |
Poison Dart Frog, Costa Rica |
Green Poison Dar Frog, Costa Rica |
Monkey frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) |
Monkey frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) |
Hyla rhodopepla tree frog on leaf |
Hyla rhodopepla tree frog on forest floor |
Cane toad (Bufo marinus) in the Amazon rainforest of Peru |
Cane toad (Bufo marinus) in the wild |
Monkey frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) |
Hyla tree frog species |
Hyla tree frog species |
Three-striped Poison dart frog (Epipedobates trivittatus) |
Monkey frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) on forest floor |
Hyla tree frog close up |
Frog, Thailand
Page 2:
Tree Frog, Thailand |
Poison Arrow Frog, Venezuela |
Panama golden frog (Atelopus zetecki) |
Dendrobates auratus poison-dart frog |
Green-and-black poison dart frog (Dendrobates auratus) |
Kihansi spray toad (Nectophrynoides asperginis) |
Kihansi spray toad (Nectophrynoides asperginis) |
Kihansi spray toad (Nectophrynoides asperginis) |
Pacman frog - Ceratophrys ornata |
Gray frog in Isalo |
Mantella betsileo frog |
Mantella aurantiaca frog |
Mantella laevigata |
Monkey frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) |
White lined leaf frog (Phyllomedusea vaillanti) |
Spinosa frog (Paa boulengeri) |
Colorado River toad or Sonoran Desert toad (Bufo alvarius) |
Dendrobates pumilio - Strawberry poison-dart frog |
Strawberry poison-dart frog - Dendrobates pumilio |
Dendrobates pumilio in bromeliad |
Strawberry poison-dart frog in epiphyte |
Dendrobates pumilio in epiphyte |
Kihansi spray toad (Nectophrynoides asperginis) |
White's tree frog, brown in color |
White's tree frog, green in color |
Boophis frog |
Boophis frog, Masoala National Park |
Boophis tree frog |
Boophis albilabris frog |
Uknown tree frog on Nosy Mangabe
Page 3:
Unknown ground frog on Nosy Mangabe |
Uknown leaf frog on Nosy Mangabe |
Frog in rainforest of Masoala NP |
Frog of the Masoala peninsula |
Frog in leaf litter of Masoala NP |
Green striped frog |
Mantella betsileo frog |
Mantella laevigata frog |
Mantella madagascariensis (Painted Mantella) |
Painted Mantella (Mantella madagascariensis), Ranomafana |
Mantidactylus curtus |
Mantidactylus pulcher frog |
Mantidactylus lugubris frog |
Mantidactylus lugubris frog |
Mantidactylus lugubris frog |
Plethodontohyla inguinalis frog |
Brown leaf frog in Gabon |
Brown frog on leaf in Ubud |
Tree frog in the Borneo rain forest |
Grey tree frog |
Argentine Horned Frog |
Acid Frog, Australia |
Acid Frog, Australia |
Acid Frog, Australia |
Toad, Costa Rica |
Glass Frog, Costa Rica |
Dendrobates azureus |
elves chasm frog, Grand Canyon |
elves chasm toad, Grand Canyon |
elves frog, Grand Canyon |
Toad, Honduras |
Toad, Honduras |
Golden Mantella, Madagascar |
Mantella Frog, Madagascar |
Mantella Frog, Madagascar |
Tree Frog, Madagascar |
Hyla tree frog |
Tree Frog, Thailand |
Frog, Thailand |
Xenopus laevis |
Frog in leaf litter of Lake Bohinj
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Related sections:
Madagascar frogs |
Peru frogs |
Indonesia frogs
More from Wikipedia.org:
Frogs are amphibians in the Order Anura, which includes frogs and toads. The term "frog" is a popular name for animals that look like toads, but are generally more slender, have a less warty and dry skin, have long legs adapted for leaping and are more aquatic. It has no meaning in animal systematics, since many anuran families include both "frogs" and "toads". The true frogs are the Ranidae and the true toads are the Bufonidae.
Characteristics
Frogs range in size from less than 50mm (2.0 in) to 300mm (11.8 in) in Conraua goliath, the Goliath frog from Cameroon, which is the largest known frog. Frogs can have horizontal pupils, like tree frogs and true frogs, or vertical pupils, like the painted frogs.
The skin is smooth, unkeratinized and hangs loosely on the body because of the lack of loose connective tissue.
Generally, frogs have long legs with webbed toes. The true frogs have a tongue with two lobes on its free end; it is attached in front. Frogs have three eyelid membranes: one transparent to protect the eyes underwater, and two which are translucent to opaque like human eyelids. They have a tympanum on each side of their head, which is involved in hearing.
Croaking
Many species of frog (and toad) have deep calls, or croaks. Frog noise tends to be spelt (for English speakers) as "crrrrk" in Britain and "ribbit" in the USA. This difference is due to Britain and the USA having different species of frogs (e.g. Rana temporaria in Britain and Rana pipiens (leopard frog) etc in the USA.) The croak of the American bullfrog Rana catesbiana is sometimes spelt "jug o' rum". The Ancient Greeks (for example Aristophanes) spelt the croak of the usual Greek species of frog as "korax" or "brekekekex co-ax co-ax": that species is probably Rana ridibunda. Small tropical frogs tend to have higher-pitched calls. Rigveda book 7 hymn 103 describes frogs with different calls (gomayu = "having a voice like a cow's" and ajamayu = "having a voice like a goat's") calling when the rains bring the breeding season.
Poison
Some species of frog secrete toxins from their skin. These toxins deter predatory animals from eating them, and some are extremely poisonous to humans. Some natives of the Amazon area extract poison from the poison dart frog and put it on their arrowheads when hunting.
Distribution and status
Frogs are found nearly worldwide, but they do not occur in antarctica and are not present on most oceanic islands.
In many parts of the world the frog populations have declined drastically over the last few decades. Many environmental scientists feel that amphibians, and frogs in particular, may be excellent biological indicators of ecosystem function because of their place in the food web, their permeable skins, their typically bi-phasic life history (in both water and on land), and how diverse and dense they have historically been in many areas. Although habitat loss is certainly one of the most important features of most declines, pollutants, climate change, parasitic infestation, introduction of non-indigenous predators/competitors, and infectious diseases (see Chitrid fungus) have also been implicated.
Life cycle
The life cycle of a frog involves several stages. Typically adult frogs gather in suitable pools, the first to arive usually being the males. Their croaking may well encourage the females to arrive. A female would wish to avoid arriving at a pond which did not have any males in attendance. Gravid female frogs are actively and persistently sought out by males and many males will often try to attach themselves to a single female but eventually one male will secure possession. Amplexus is the process wherein the male grasps the female while she lays her eggs. At the same time, he fertilizes them with a fluid containing sperm. The eggs are about 2.0 to 2.8 millimetres in diameter and are dark brown and are covered in an outer shell of gelatinous transparent material which swells in contact with water. The female frog lays her eggs in a shallow pond or creek, where they will be sheltered from the current and from predators. The eggs, known as frogspawn hatch into tadpoles. The tadpole stage develops gradually into a froglet, resembling an adult but retaining a vestigial tail. Finally the froglet develops into an adult frog. Typically, tadpoles are herbivores, feeding mostly on algae, whereas juvenile and adult frogs are rather voracious carnivores.
Most temperate species of frog reproduce in the period between late autumn to early spring. In the UK most Common Frog populations produce frogspawn in February although there is wide variation in timing. Water temperatures at this time of year are relatively low and typically between four and 10 degrees celsius. Reproducing in these conditions helps the developing tadpoles because dissolved oxygen concentrations in the water are highest at cold temperatures. More importantly, reproducing early in the season ensures that appropriate food is available to the developing frogs at the right time.
Diet
Most frogs eat insects such as mosquitoes, earthworms and small fish such as minnows; however, a few of the bigger ones may tackle larger prey, such as mice. Some frogs use their sticky tongues effectively in catching fast-moving prey. Still others capture their prey in their mouth with speed and agility. Certain big frogs eat small frogs.
Predators
Many animals eat frogs. These include herons, stork, large fish, snakes otters, foxes, badgers, coatis, etc etc. Large domestic ducks are built for dredging rather than fishing, but routinely catch and swallow frogs, as commemorated in the song Froggy would a-wooing go.
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