European tree frog

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European tree frog
File:European tree frog.jpg.jpg
European tree frog (Hyla arborea)
Scientific classification
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H. arborea
Binomial name
Hyla arborea
Linnaeus, 1758

The European tree frog is a small frog that can grow to 4,5 cm in size at most. Historically, tree frogs were used as barometers because they respond to approaching rain by croaking. In the breeding season, even when migrating to their mating pools, they croak as well. Depending on subspecies, temperature, humidity, and the frog's 'mood', skin color ranges from bright to olive green, grey, brown and yellow. The head is rounded, the lip drops strongly, the pupil has the shape of a horizontal ellipse and the eardrum is clearly recognizable.

Males can be distinguished from females by their browny-yellowy, large (folded) vocal sacs in the throat region. The amplexus is axillary (in the armpits). Both adult males and females reach sizes up to 30-40 mm, rarily longer than 45 mm. The smooth, shining, usually leaf-green back and the white-yellowish to grey belly are separated by a dark stripe on its flank reaching from the nostrils, over the eye and the eardrum, to the groin, contrasting the green, and forming a dark spot near the hips. The hind legs are much larger and stronger than the fore legs, which enables to jump rapidly.

Calls

Some frog species look so identical the frogs cannot discern the difference between their species and a different species. To overcome this difficulty, each frog species has a specific call that the male innately knows and performs. Thus, the females can recognize their specific species’ mating call and respond to it by following the call. It is always impressive, that such a small froglet have this very loud voice. They are the loudest frogs of Europe, because of their large larynx (about one-fifth of the body length). The croaking sounds like a strong rithmic 'creck-creck-creck-creck...' and resemble the call of the Baillon's Crake (Porzana pusilla) and the Little Crake (Porzana parva). In late afternoon or dusk, H. arborea starts to call sometimes throughout the night. Calling and breeding activity probably begins in warm nights at late April. The call of H. arborea is very characteristic and easy identifable, so this fact helps to determinate these frogs in their natural habitats.

Mating

Between the months of April and August, Squirrel Treefrogs of at least one year old begin to mate, Tree frogs find their mate through croaking and quivering. Once the male and female find each other, amplexus, the term for the embrace between the male and the female begins. The male, because of its smaller size, goes on top of the female. Fertilization is external, with the female’s eggs laid during amplexus. Next, the male sheds sperm over the up to 1000 usually individually deposited eggs and fertilization transpires. Females usually lay eggs twice a mating season.

Spawn

Eggs are deposited mostly during May, with the earliest spawn observed at the end of March. The clusters of spawn (each consisting of 10 to 50 eggs) are as big as walnuts and are deposited in shallow places grown with water plants. The top of every egg is brown and the bottom yellowy white. The diameter of an egg lies between 1.5 to 2 millimeter. After the deposition the eggs come together in clusters in order that the animal pole, which is pigmented brown and yellow, points upward and the vegetative pole, which is white and unpigmented, points downward.

The time of development of the clutches depends on the prevailing water temperatures. Clusters that sink to the bottom of the water develop considerably slower than those which are exposed to the sunlight directly under the surface of the water.

Distribution

Widely distributed throughout Europe from the Ukraine and Belarus to the Balkans, Crete, Italy, the Benelux, Germany, most of France and the northwestern Iberian peninsula. Absent in the British Isles, the majority of Scandinavia and Denmark, the Alps and small northern parts of the Netherlands and Germany.



Barometer

The European Tree Frog is called an barometer too. Every time rain is coming, the frog starts to croak. But he starts to croak too by any pressure changes. The skin of the frog is by sunny weather light green, and by cool weather dark green till grey.

Gallery

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