Welcome to our blog,
FROGS ARE GREEN!

For over 200 million years, ponds, marshes, grasslands, and rain forests have come alive with the calls of frogs. Yet these remarkable and colorful animals are declining at such a rapid rate that they are being called the Earth’s next dinosaurs. According to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, a third of the world’s amphibian species are threatened with extinction. To read more, click here!

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Teachers:
Calling all Frog Artists!

Susan and I are seeking kids’ frog art—lots of it! We hope to encourage kids and their teachers to learn about and get interested in frogs, toads, and other amphibians. If you’re an elementary school teacher, parent, or educator, please send us jpegs (2mb maximum size) of your students’ or kids’ drawings or paintings of frogs and we will display them in school group galleries on the FROGS ARE GREEN blog. We’d be happy to receive images of any art form—sculpture, drawing, painting, or watercolor. Read more>>

Announcing the winner of our first "Frogs Are Green" photo contest! Congratulations to Jocelyn Hyers, whose winning photograph of a green tree frog was taken in Pierce County, Georgia, USA. To see her photo click here!

Do you do fieldwork or amphibian research with a zoo, environmental organization, university, or government agency? If so, please consider writing a guest post for us about your work (@300 words). Email it to us at: info@frogsaregreen.com.

Frog Call of the Week: Spring Peepers

Can you tell the difference between crickets and spring peepers? I used to get confused sometimes between the sound of crickets chirping and frogs calling. Some frogs have bird-like calls. In anticipation of next spring, and in hopes of becoming better Frog Watchers, we are highlighting one frog call per week. We’ll start with familiar frogs in North America, but will also feature frogs from around the world. Below you’ll hear spring peepers and crickets so you can learn to tell the difference. Actually, it’s kind of fun to play the videos at the same time, too!

Spring peeper calling:

Crickets chirping:

If you would like us to highlight a particular frog call, please let us know!

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8 Responses to “Frog Call of the Week: Spring Peepers”

  1. Kiara Crutchev says:

    Nice level of information here. There is so much data around about this subject that sometimes you cannot see the wood for the trees but you have pitched this at just the right level so that the lay person can understand – thank you!

  2. I wanted to thank you for this excellent read!! I definitely loved every little bit of it. I have you bookmarked your site to check out the latest stuff you post.

  3. admin says:

    Hi Betty–

    We will try to find out the type of peepers you have in Texas. Thanks for your comment!

    Mary Jo

  4. Can you do the sound & photo of the peepers we have here in Leander, TX (just north of Austin, TX) ? I am not sure if they are Spring Peepers. I have them in my backyard, they sound like birds.

  5. PianoDraft says:

    PianoDraft…

    Hello :) I bookmarked this site. Thanks heaps for this!… if anyone else has anything, it would be much appreciated. Enjoy!…

  6. admin says:

    Dear Hubert,
    Thanks so much for supporting our cause. Stayed tuned!
    Susan

  7. HubertJouan says:

    Hi,

    Indeed this reminds me the frogs’puddle near my place.

    It’s a singular cause you have. Good luck

    Greetings

    HJ

  8. Deb says:

    Aw! The Spring Peeper sounds like a bird :) . I love both sounds, but especially enjoy that of crickets.

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