My guess is :
Barking Tree Frog (Hyla Gratiosa)
My guess is :
Barking Tree Frog (Hyla Gratiosa)
Current Collection
Dendrobates leucomelas - standard morph
Dendrobates auratus “Costa Rican Green Black"
Dendrobates auratus "Pena Blanca"
Dendrobates tinctorius “New River”
Dendrobates tinctorius "Green Sipaliwini"
Dendrobates tinctorius “Powder Blue"
Dendrobates tinctorius "French Guiana Dwarf Cobalt"
Phyllobates terribilis “Mint”
Phyllobates terribilis "Orange"
Phyllobates bicolor "Uraba"
Oophaga pumilio "Black Jeans"
Oophaga pumilio "Isla Popa"
Oophaga pumilio "Bastimentos"
Oophaga pumilio “Mimbitimbi”
Oophaga pumilio "Rio Colubre"
Oophaga pumilio "Red Frog Beach”
Oophaga pumilio "Rio Branco"
Oophaga pumilio “Valle del Rey”
Oophaga pumilio "BriBri"
Oophaga pumilio "El Dorado"
Oophaga pumilio "Cristobal"
Oophaga pumilio "Rambala"
Oophaga “Vicentei” (blue)
Oophaga sylvatica "Paru"
Oophaga sylvatica "Pata Blanca"
Oophaga histrionica “Redhead”
Oophaga histrionica "Blue"
Oophaga lehmanni "Red"
Oophaga histrionica "Tado"
Ranitomeya variabilis "Southern"
Ranitomeya imitator "Varadero"
Ranitomeya sirensis "Lower Ucayali"
Ranitomeya vanzolinii
http://www.fernsfrogs.com
https://www.facebook.com/ferns.frogs
My golden tree frog is the best! But I also had a green tree frog once. He was AWESOME. So I vote for both. Yes, I am cheating.
Okay, 3 replies, time to reveal the answer!
Once I seen one of these... that was it...
Whites Tree Frog (Litoria Caerulea) – Blue Phase!
You'll love them. Active and entertaining.
1.0.0 Red Eyed Leaf/ Frog - Agalychnis callidryas
1.1.1 Bumblebee Dart Frog - Dendrobates leucomelas
1.1.0 Dendrobates truncatus - Yellow Striped
1.1.1 Dendrobates tinctorius – Bakhuis Mountain
1.1.0 - Dendrobates tinctorius - Powder Blue
1.1.0 - Ranitomeya vanzolinii
I would've gone for the gratiosa. They are just as cool and not everybody and their brother has them. I once saw them at a show calling from the deli cups with hundreds of people passing by. Blew me away! My second choice would have been Litoria infrafrenata, the white-lipped or giant treefrog.
Just for the record, Kassina are not arboreal. They are more terrestrial/fossorial than they would be arboreal.
Also, leucomystax is in the genus Polypedates, not Rhacophorus.
OK my inner science geek has said enough.
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