frogposting
frogposting
frogposting
48 posts
submit a frog for identification! remember to include your location for an accurate id.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
frogposting · 1 year ago
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BEHOLD!!! - Canadian Toad (Anaxyrus hemiophrys), family Bufonidae, southern SK, Canada
Reach with in to your local garden and you will find a friend and boy.
photograph by M.Jo Foulston
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Some African rain frogs if you have time would be fun <3
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Round Frog is wearing her Shiniest Golden Eyes and her Finest Pearlescent Feeties to see if you might consider bringing her some Early Dinner today!
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Excerpt from this story from EcoWatch:
Biologists have created small hotspot shelters that operate like little saunas to help vulnerable and endangered amphibians fight off a fast-spreading and deadly fungal disease that has been a major threat to amphibians for decades.
Researchers from Macquarie University and the University of Melbourne developed the shelters as a way to help amphibians ward off chytridiomycosis, a fungal disease of the skin. 
As explained by Amphibian Ark, a conservation group, the fungi that cause the disease can grow in the skin of an infected amphibian. The fungi inhibit the ability for water to move through the amphibian’s skin, leading to heart failure. Outbreaks of chytridiomycosis have led to major declines in some amphibian species around the world, particularly in Australia, Mexico, Central America, the Andes region of South America and the western U.S., Amphibian Ark reported.
Globally, 90% of amphibians that are threatened by chytridiomycosis have become extinct in the wild or altogether, and 124 affected species have seen population declines of 90% or higher, Macquarie University reported.
In response, researchers found a low-cost way that they determined to be effective in improving the frogs’ resiliency to the disease. They used whatever materials were already available, such as bricks or PVC, to build small shelters for the amphibians. The idea is that the shelters will become warm enough that the fungal disease will not be able to grow or spread.
“The whole thing is like a mini med spa for frogs,” Anthony Waddle, lead author of the study and a Schmidt Science Fellow at Macquarie University’s Applied BioSciences, said in a statement. “In these simple little hotspots, frogs can go and heat up their bodies to a temperature that destroys the infections. As with many human diseases, such as influenza, chytridiomycosis is seasonal. Winter is a particularly vulnerable time for frogs, given there are few opportunities to heat themselves up. By making hot spots available to frogs in winter, we empower them to cure their infections, or not even get sick at all.”
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Fowler's toad (Anaxyrus fowleri), family Bufonidae, Burlington County, New Jersey, USA
Photograph by Adrian Bara-Popa
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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The teeny tiniest frog.
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Southern Corroboree Frog (Pseudophryne corroboree), family Myobatrachidae, found in far SE Australia
CRITICALLY ENDANGERED.
Poisonous.
Endangered due to climate change, Chytrid fungus, introduced species, and brushfires. There are fewer than 180 individuals left in the wild.
photographs by Tiffany Pereira and Toni Kingston
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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cope’s grey treefrog (Dryophytes chrysoscelis)
My housemate just took a drive to the landfill to throw out junk the previous homeowners left behind, and when they got there they found this tree frog hiding in our outdoor trash can. After a weird field trip, she is home in our yard again.
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#id
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Azuay Stubfoot Toads (Atelopus bombolochos), family Bufonidae, endemic to southern Ecuador
CRITICALLY ENDANGERED.
photograph by Javier Aznar & Paolo Mars
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Frogs that are called "toads", but are not "true toads" (family Bufonidae), but are in a different non-true toad group...
a post for @mortimermcmirestinks
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Bornean Horned Toad (Pelobatrachus nasutus), family Megophryidae, Danum Valley Conservation Area, Borneo
photograph by Marco Chan
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Iberian Midwife Toad, Alytes cisternasii, male with eggs, family Alytidae, Spain
photograph by Javier Ábalos
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Crucifix Toad aka Holy Cross Frog (Notaden bennettii), male, family Limnodynastidae, New South Wales, Australia
photograph by JJ Harrison 
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Oriental Fire-bellied Toad (Bombina orientalis), family Bombinatoridae, found in far eastern Asia
Poisonous.
photograph by Laurent Lebois 
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Mexican Burrowing Toad (Rhinophrynus dorsalis), male - fully inflated and calling them fine ass females, family Rhinophrynidae, South TX, USA
This species is the only extant member of this family.
photograph by Carl J. Franklin
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Emei Mustache Toad aka Taosze Spiny Toad, (Leptobrachium boringii), family Megophryidae, endemic to SE China
ENDANGERED.
The larger males grow keratinized spines on the upper lip, which they use to defend territories, during the breeding season. The spines fall off after the breeding season.
photograph: Jingsong Shi
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Scientists make chance discovery of rare blue skin mutation in Kimberley magnificent tree frog
In short:
Ecologists at a remote Western Australian wildlife sanctuary have been amazed to discover a blue tree frog.
It is the only known discovery of a magnificent tree frog with a blue skin pigment mutation.
What's next?
Australian Wildlife Conservancy scientists believe there may be more blue frogs in the Charnley River–Artesian Wildlife Sanctuary in WA's far north.
Magnificent Tree Frog (Ranoidea splendida), family Hylidae
In the far north of Western Australia, 2,500 kilometres north-east of Perth in the Charnley River–Artesian Range Wildlife Sanctuary, field ecologist Jake Barker couldn't believe what he was seeing when he received a photo from one of the sanctuary's land managers. Mr Barker said two land managers were in the workshop when they turned towards a bench and saw a blue magnificent tree frog sitting there. "Seeing the picture of the frog, it definitely elevated my heart rate and I was very excited and then getting down there to see it in person ... it was so cool, it was a really exciting and special thing," he said...
Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-07-12/scientists-discover-mutant-blue-tree-frog-in-was-kimberley/104082140
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Everyone welcome your new cult leader, Spinach
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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Where do I go from here?
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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soggy boy saturday
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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fashion
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frogposting · 1 year ago
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a polite little lady
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