BIG-EYED TREE FROG


The 'Big-eyed Tree Frog' (''Leptopelis vermiculatus'') is a species of frog found in forest areas in the African country of Tanzania. In some literature it is referred to as the 'Amani Forest Tree Frog'.

Contents
Physical description
Ecology & behaviour
Similar species
References

Physical description


A brown phase Big-eyed Tree Frog

This species is a medium to large frog ranging from 40-85 mm in length. It has two very different colour phases. In one phase they are a bright green with scattered black specks all over the dorsal surface and the sides are marble with black and white. With some specimens the end of the tibia to the toes, forearms and upper lip have white blotching outlined with dark green or black. In the other phase they are brown with an irregular shaped, darker brown triangular patch on the dorsum. Randomly placed darker or lighter brown spots and patches may appear over the dorsal surface, legs and forearms and a dark brown streak often runs from behind the tympanum ending halfway between the armpit and groin. In both phases the ventral surface is cream-white. Some specimens show a transition between both phases and change from the green phase to the brown phase as they mature. The eyes are very big compared with body size and are golden with brown lines and flecks. It has large toe pads that are used for climbing. The tympanum is distinct.

Ecology & behaviour


This species inhabits the closed-canopy wet tropical rainforests of Tanzania between the altitudes of 900 and 1800 m. Males call while in the water, and are very territorial. They have two different calls: one is a “ga…ga…ga”, used for attracting females, and the other is a “rrrrrrrr-ga” used for deterring other males of the same species. They are insectivorous.

Similar species


This species is very similar to the Yellow-spotted Tree Frog (''Leptopelis flavomaculatus''), a species that also varies greatly in dorsal patterning and colouration. The Yellow-spotted Tree Frog, in its green phase, lacks the fine black specks that are present over the dorsum in the Big-eyed Tree Frogs green phase. The brown phase of the Yellow-spotted Tree Frog has a white blotch on the elbow, which brown phase Big-eyed Tree Frog lack.

References



★ Database entry includes a range map, a brief justification of why this species is vulnerable, and the criteria used

AmphibiaWeb - ''Leptopelis vermiculatus''

Global Amphibiam Assessment - ''Leptopelis vermiculatus''

Amphibian Species of the World: ''Leptopelis vermiculatus''

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