Peron's tree frog

Peron's tree frog (Litoria peronii), also known as the emerald-spotted tree frog, emerald-speckled tree frog, laughing tree frog, and maniacal cackle frog, is a common Australian tree frog of the family Pelodryadidae.

Peron's tree frog
Male with partially inflated vocal sac

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Pelodryadidae
Genus: Litoria
Species:
L. peronii
Binomial name
Litoria peronii
Tschudi, 1838
Peron's tree frog range

Description and Habitat

Peron's tree frog is one of the most variably coloured frogs in Australia, with the ability to change colour in less than one hour. They don't like to be handled for long periods of time. It also varies in shades of grey and brown, where its lightest is almost white. The frog has mottled yellow and black thighs, armpits, and groin. Occasionally, emerald spots are found on the back, which increase in number with age. A characteristic uncommon in the genus Litoria is pupils which appear cross-shaped. This characteristic is only shared with Tyler's tree frog within the genus Litoria. The male Peron's tree frog is about 44–53 mm, while females are 46–65 mm.

These frogs prefer living in places full of climbing material, (stones and sticks) and do not like water. They occasionally enter the water for short periods of time. They can bathe themselves. They can also climb most walls (minus metal or steel).

Ecology and behaviour

Peron's tree frog with a leech attached to the front foot

The call of Peron's tree frog is a high-pitched cackle, giving it the common names: the "laughing tree frog" and the "maniacal cackle frog". The frog is found in forests, woodlands, shrublands, and open areas, often far from a water source. They inhabit a variety of niches, predominantly arboreal, such as tree hollows, cracks, and beneath flaking bark. The frog is commonly found near civilisation (such as suburban Sydney), using ponds as their breeding-water source. They can often be seen on windows or near lights at night, hunting the insects attracted to these light sources. They can often be found at dusk on houseboat windows and beneath street lamps along the Murray River in South Australia.

As a pet

In Australia, this animal may be kept in captivity/zoo with the appropriate permit.

gollark: sbgcsetup
gollark: TerraFirmaCraft looks *extremely*.
gollark: My (E2E, lategame) ore acquirer and processor. It uses a bunch of sieves running on soul sand, gravel and dust to make ore pieces and gems and such, as well as a void ore miner (I resent EnvironmentalTech, but apparently you need the crystals from it), as well as a laser drill, as well as an ender chest from the lunar mining site. It uses Ender IO machines for smelting/some grinding because they're really, really fast, Mekanism 5x ore processing (which constantly ends up backlogged) for a few rarer things, and 4x ore processing (still horribly backlogged) for most of the rest.
gollark: What will it actually do?
gollark: <:SolarPanel:423059956422410240> <- Is this going to be a 1.3 feature, then?

References

  • Jean-Marc Hero, Peter Robertson, John Clarke. 2004. Leptopelis peronii. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  • Cogger, H. G. (1979). Reptiles & Amphibians of Australia. A. H. & A. W. Reed Pty Ltd. ISBN 0-589-50108-9.
  • Article Road: List of All Frog Breeds: Things You Can Do to Ensure Your Frog Has a Long, Happy and Healthy Life: Peron's Tree Frog
  • Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water, New South Wales: Amphibian Keeper's Licence: Species Lists

Media related to Litoria peronii at Wikimedia Commons

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