Cope's Gray Treefrog - Hyla chrysoscelis |
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DescriptionCope's gray treefrog is 1¼-2 inches in length. It can range in color from a mottled gray to brown, to green, depending on its environment. It tends to become darker when it is cold or dark. Its coloring helps it blend in with tree bark! It has light colored spots under its eyes and bright yellow-orange on the underside of its thighs. Like the gray treefrog, it can change its color in seconds. It has large, sticky toe pads that help it cling to tree bark and other surfaces. Cope's gray treefrog and the gray treefrog look exactly alike! You can tell them apart by their calls. The gray treefrog's call has a slower trill that is more musical than the Cope's treefrog call. The gray treefrog is also a little larger than the Cope's gray treefrog and it has bumpier skin. Scientists can tell the difference between the two species because the gray treefrog has twice as many chromosomes as Cope's gray treefrogs. RangeCope's gray treefrog is found from Manitoba east to Maine and south to northern Florida and central Texas. Cope's gray treefrog is found in New Hampshire. |
HabitatCope's gray treefrog lives in woodlands, grasslands, prairies, meadows, fields, and swamps. It is rarely seen on the ground. It is usually found perched on a tree or shrub. DietCope's gray treefrog finds its food in the trees and shrubs. It eats moths, tree crickets, ants, flies, grasshoppers, and beetles. Life CycleBreeding season runs from April to July. Males gather in vegetation in and near breeding ponds and call out to the females. When the male attracts a female, he comes down from his perch to mate. The female lays as many as 2,000 eggs in groups of 10-40 eggs. The eggs are attached to vegetation in the water. The tadpoles hatch in four or five days and change into froglets in about two months. Behavior
Cope's gray treefrog is nocturnal. It spends the day resting in trees and shrubs. At night it crawls among the branches and leaves looking for food. It usually only comes out of the trees and bushes during the breeding season and in the winter. It hibernates under leaves, bark, or rocks on the forest floor. |
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Audio Credit: USGS Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center |