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#lepidobatrachus
herpsandbirds · 8 months
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Budgett's Frog (Lepidobatrachus laevis), family Ceratophrynidae, El Chaco, Paraguay
photograph via:
ROUND-EYED BUDGETT´S FROG Lepidobatrachus laevis FAUNA PARAGUAY
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markscherz · 6 months
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Good morning-afternoon-night-whatever,
May i kindly ask what are these things? Until now the most certain answer i had is ‘exploded tadpoles’ and it’s driving a lot of people crazy
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Thank you in advance
These are normal tadpoles of Lepidobatrachus laevis, Budgett's frog.
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murasakinocatt · 9 months
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funkyfrogoftheday · 3 months
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today's courteous frog of the day is the llanos frog (Lepidobatrachus llanensis)!!!! this uncommon aquatic beast lives in dry scrubland. their eyes are also very soulful.
photo by Andres Ulibarrie
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ash3 · 9 months
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Angry screams
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bombinabombina · 2 years
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no marriage unless sb proposes to me with one of. those
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it says so in one of the pics but the artist is @ nina_myway on Instagram btw
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vintagewildlife · 5 months
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Llanos frog (Lepidobatrachus llanensis) By: Chris Mattison From: A Practical Guide to Exotic Pets 1994
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cypherdecypher · 1 year
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Animal of the Day!
Budgett’s Frog (Lepidobatrachus laevis)
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(Photo from National Geographic)
Conservation Status- Least Concern
Habitat- Southern South America
Size (Weight/Length)- 13 cm
Diet- Insects; Amphibians; Snails
Cool Facts- Nicknamed the hippo frog for obvious reasons, the Budgett’s frog is always smiling. Despite living in South America, their homes can get as cold as -13 degrees Celsius in the winter. During this time, the Budgett’s frog sheds off an extra layer of skin that prevents them from losing water in the extreme cold. These frogs are relatively aggressive and are not afraid to use their pseudo-fangs to deliver a strong bite to anyone foolish enough to wake them up. Their main threat is habitat loss, however their massive population is adapting to park ponds.
Rating- 11/10 (1/3 of their body is their head.)
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sambuchito · 1 year
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"Lepidobatrachus dibumartinez" 🦴 is laaaaame as shit i would've named it "Dibusaurio"
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bestfrogbracket · 9 months
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Red-Eyed Tree Frog: This species is best known for its striking colouration, which changes throughout their range. Individuals from the Northern end of their range in Mexico average 5 bars on their sides, while those from Panama average 9 bars. Froglets are able to change colour, and even their eggs are able to adapt to environmental conditions. If they sense a danger such as a snake, predatory wasp, or fungus, tadpoles can choose to immediately hatch and drop from the leaf on which the eggs are laid into the water below. (video) Which eggs hatch is chosen based on the source of the danger and can occur as soon as four days after the eggs are laid. Normally, eggs from a clutch hatch asynchronously approximately a week after fertilization, and tadpoles which fall out of the water can survive up to 20 hours. Males use the same vibrational sensing that the eggs do in territorial disputes, where they shake the branch they are on before wrestling.
Budgett's Frog: These South American frogs overwinter in underground burrows, where they hide in a cocoon of hardened skin to keep moist. An aggressive species, their tadpoles have nearly adult jaws, which they use to swallow their prey (sometimes other tadpoles) whole. As for adults, they puff up and screech loudly when threatened, going as far as to attack and bite the perceived danger. Males also have a dark blue throat (not visible in the image,) and all members of the species have a spade-like “tubercle” on their back legs that helps them dig.
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marzso · 11 months
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Lepidobatrachus laevis
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herpsandbirds · 5 months
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Llanos Frog (Lepidobatrachus llanensis), family Ceratophryidae, Bolivian Chaco, close to the Paraguayan border
Photograph by Steffen Reichle
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markscherz · 10 months
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What are your thoughts on Budgett’s frogs
I have no idea why they are called Budgett's frogs (Lepidobatrachus laevis). They should be called 'smooth scaly frogs', which is the Latin translation of the name (even though Frank and Ramus [1995] called the genus 'Paraguay Horned Frogs' for some reason). They were described by John Samuel Budgett in 1899, and for some reason the common name refers to him, even though he also described another species, Lepidobatrachus asper (translates as 'rough scaly frog', which makes *total sense*, but for some reason the common name is 'Paraguay Horned Frog', which…doesn't make any sense, given that that is also the common name for the whole genus).
Other than this confusing aspect, they're great frogs. Comical of appearance, loud of voice, Wednesday of week, bulgy of eye—what's not to like‽
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tsustuff · 1 year
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masterpost of creative stuff i'm doing
media consumption lists
2023 | 2024
fanfic:
somewhere worse, a jonmartin fic cowritten by my friend. latest update here!
for my profile on ao3: lepidobatrachus, and for my fic tag on this blog: i'm writing
art:
i’ve got a redbubble if you like snails or axolotls
cross stitch:
cross stitch progress blog: tsustitch
sea dragon by nadezhda gavrilenkova complete!
white forest by me
playlists:
dont make these very often but
things i listen to while i read or write
magnus archives has me by the throat
misc:
i've been keeping track of my thoughts during each new tmagp episode, starts here. has an index
i also have a ko-fi. nothing on there but a membership so far (one tier, $1/mo) but i plan to start selling things so WATCH OUT
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leaarong · 2 years
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WHY IS BUDGETT’S FROG SCREAMING? (lepidobatrachus laevis)
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frogs-from-bogs · 3 years
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Lepidobatrachus asper by John White
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