Red-Eyed Tree FrogCommon Name: Red-Eyed Tree Frog Scientific Name: Agalychnis callidryas Type: Amphibians Diet: Carnivore Group Name: Army Average Life Span In The Wild: 5 years Size: 1.5 to 2.75 inches Size relative to a teacup: IUCN Red List Status: ? Least concern LC NT VU EN ...
Size: 2-3 inches Weight: 0.2-0.5 ounces Lifespan: 5 years Diet: Carnivore Habitat: Central America Population: Abundant Conservation Status: Least Concern Description The red-eyed tree frog is a small arboreal species. Adult males are smaller (2 inches) than adult females (3 inches). Adults ...
The Red-Eyed Tree Frog is indigenous to Mexico and Central America, and a few may be found in Northern Columbia. Like other tree frogs, Red-Eyed Tree Frogs generally thrive in tropical forests near water. Just imaging tearing a Red-Eyed Tree Frog from its natural habitat near-natural rivers...
Large males of sired larger froglets and there were positive correlations between sire size and froglet traits for both species. Tadpoles of both species that remained in a longer larval period emerged from metamorphosis at a greater size. The two speci...
The Red-eyed Treefrog is a broadly distributed Neotropical phyllomedusine frog [14]. This species exhibits genetic and phenotypic divergence across popu- lations [15–17], including strong differentiation in color pattern and body size [17], skin antimicrobial peptides [18], and advertisement ...
Although many frog eggs weaken and expand continuously until hatching, egg capsules of A. callidryas remain robust and stable in size throughout their hatching period. We found two morphologically distinct hatching gland cell (HGC) types: early HGCs appear at 3 days on the snout and dorsum, ...
After all tadpoles have hatched, the effect of hatching age on size decreases. I found no evidence for an effect of hatchiKAREN M. WARKENTINBiological Journal of the Linnean SocietyWarkentin, K.M. (1999). Effects of hatching age on develop- ment and hatchling morphology in the red-eyed ...
In playback experiments using a robotic model frog and an electrodynamic shaker, we demonstrate that plant-borne vibrations generated by the shaking (tremulation) display of male red-eyed treefrogs (Agalychnis callidryas) are a vibrational signal, necessary and sufficient to elicit tremulations in ...