ah, good to know -- thanks. I'll leave it be. Is it common for a frog to just stay in a tree for days?
ah, good to know -- thanks. I'll leave it be. Is it common for a frog to just stay in a tree for days?
Tree frogs live in trees and rarely leave them.
Remember to take care of the enclosure and it will take care of your frog!
understood, thanks -- it is just that this "tree" is very young and barely grown, and this frog just appeared suddenly, and seems bigger than I understand tree frogs to be, and is hanging up there on some very thin branches. But then of course I know so little about frogs! It's a very appealing creature.
From your description it sounds more like it's one of the native toads (colour, light stripe down the back and especially the size). The native treefrog kinda frogs are much smaller, especially the ones that typically come in brown. An escapee wouldn't be impossible, but nor would a toad that's decided it likes to hang out in a tree. I had a Rana clamitans (a very aquatic frog) in the garden a few years back that could regularly be found a few feet up an evergreen.
It wouldn't have been trying to drink the water (they don't drink through their mouths), it was likely responding to nearby movement by trying to eat it, just in case it was something tasty.
A picture would help with the ID, but likely you're good to just leave it be and enjoy watching it when you can. For reference, here's a list of upstate NY frogs:
Frogs and Toads of New York
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