Hi there,
It's been a while since I posted anything here, but warmer, wetter weather always revives my enthusiasm and gets me out into the field. I've only managed a few trips out so far this year, none too far from Taipei, but here are some of the frogs I've been able to snap with my faltering point-and-shoot.
First off, a few taken in the small-scale farms among the hills near XinDian, a district just south of Taipei.
Polypedates braueri, until a couple of years ago classified as a Taiwan polulation of P. megacephalus, which was only in the 1980s split off from P. leucomystax. A very common treefrog, but no less fun for that!
Another very common treefrog, the tiny Kurixalus idiootocus. The name refers not to stupidity, but to its odd habit (for a treefrog) of laying eggs on land, without foam, near - but not above - water bodies, to be washed into them by rainfall.
A not-so-common treefrog, Polypedates prasinatus, the Emerald Treefrog. This one is restricted to northern Taiwan, and while it's quite common in the locations where it occurs, it's vulnerable to environmental change. Classified as Near Threatened, and a protected species. In common with a few of the other treefrogs here, it seems to have backed itself into a bit of a corner - it tends to congregate near farms, where buckets and cisterns provide perfect reservoirs for breeding, but that leaves it vulnerable if the farmer decides to start using pesticides, or just empties his buckets.
A single fuzzy shot of Microhyla fissipes, a bit out of its element on a dry evening. These usually only put in an appearance during rainy weather, when they "sing" (rasp/snore) in choruses from beneath leaf litter, or in this case, human litter.
And a couple more from the same location - a sleeping japalura and common Taiwan toad.
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! Always look forward to your field trip reports because of the gorgeous animals, great photography and interesting stories. Hard to pick any favorites here; but the juvenile Rhacophorus prasinatus is so cute
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