Quote Originally Posted by John View Post
Colouring looks odd to me but it could be a bullfrog.
There is quite a bit of variation in bullfrogs throughout their range, but not as radically as in a frog like Dendrobates tinctorius. The South Shore Science Center has a bullfrog on display that looks nothing like the bullfrogs that show up in my pool. When I first saw it, I thought they had mislabeled it. I later read about the variation in the species, but forget where I read it.
Jonpwn's bullfrog looks a lot like the one pictured on Eco-wear's "Frogs & Toads of the World" T-shirt. Of course, this is not how I IDed it. The frog does not have any dorso-lateral ridges and there are only two Ranids in eastern North America that lack them, Lithobates catesbeianus and Lithobates grylio. One way to ID one from the other is the length of the toes. In the pig frog the 4th toe barely extends beyond the webbing where in the bullfrog it goes well beyond the webbing.
Another is the call. Lithobates grylio is called the pig frog for a reason. It sounds just like a pig. The bullfrog sounds like a bass chello.