



Green Treefrog - Hyla cinerea


- Diagnostic Features:
- Size: 1.25 to 2.5 inches (32 to 64 mm)
- Color:
- Typically bright green
- Often paler, yellow-green at night
- Other:
- Slim, smooth body
- White lips
- Lateral stripes of white or yellow coloration
- Lateral stripes usually extend to groin, but may be
much shorter, or lacking
- Many have small yellow dorsal spots
- Large toe pads present
- Natural History:
- Habitat:
- This frog prefers wet or moist areas such as
swamps, lake sides, and the edges of streams. It is occasionally found
in brackish water.
- Behavior:
- It is nocturnal and prefers to climb, rather than
jump.
- It feeds on various insects.
- Spends the day flattened against leaves or green
stemmed vegetation
- Breeding:
- Breeding occurs from March to October.
- Eggs are laid in a jelly envelope attached to
floating plants.
- Each female lays about 400 eggs
- Voice: Sonogram
: Call
( Long, Ben Hill, & Jeff Davis Counties )
- Ringing, bell-like call, repeated up to 75 times in one
minute
- Hundreds of calling males may be heard during breeding
season
- Tadpoles:
- Tadpole stage: 60 days
- Transformed size: 12 - 17 mm

- LTRF 2/3; narrow midventral gap in marginal papillae
absent; eyes lateral; east of Mississippi River; regardless of size,
stage or range, notable colors or patterns in Section 10 absent; P-3
short, P-2/P-3 > 1.8; lateral surface of tail muscle pigmented
throughout (even if diffusely), mottled, or graded from dark dorsally
to pale ventrally (i.e., not bicolored)
- P-2/P-3 ca. 2.2; P-1 without medial gap; length of one
side of A-2/width of medial gap ca. 3.5; lower jaw sheath narrow;
midventral marginal papillae biserial; several submarginal papillae
scattered laterally; entire body dark or greenish with yellowish or
yellow-green tinge and with pale lines converging from eyes to nares in
life, dorsum of at least larger tadpoles with freckled pattern; throat
speckled diffusely; temporary and permanent lentic sites with emergent
vegetation from Louisiana north to southeastern Missouri and southwest
to central Texas
- Range:
- In North America, this treefrog is found in the deep
South, from Maryland to Texas.
- In Georgia, it is found throughout the state, except
for the NW section.

- In Light
Blue: Williamson, Gerald K. & Moulis,
Robert A., Distribution of Amphibians and Reptiles in Georgia, Special
Publication No. 3, Savannah Science Museum, Inc. Savannah, Georgia, 1994
- In Green:
Sound Recordings
- In Yellow:
From Both '94 study and Sound Recordings
- In Magenta:
Photograph, not found by '94, may or may not be sound record
- In Medium
Blue: Photograph and in '94 study, may or may
not be sound record
- In Orange:
County Record by other Herp Atlas Volunteers
- In Red:
US Distribution from various sources


May 25, 2008 - wwknapp@mindspring.com