RFHG6TYB–Yellow cricket tree frog (Dendropsophus microcephalus) on a leaf in swampy rainforest, Belize, Central America
RFAX200H–Toad (Bufonidae) eating a cricket (Gryllidae)
RFP97K6J–Frogs With Crickets And Grasshoppers By Scorpions And Larva
RFAMAR9Y–Two frogs and an insect perching on a tree branch
RFGJHYFX–animal pet frog
RFHY6JN9–Grass Frog (Fejervarya limnocharis)
RMW7N3JY–Southern cricket frog (Acris gryllus) Richmond County, North Carolina, USA, May, meetyourneighboursproject.net
RMDAGX3R–Long-legged Cricket frog, Alpine Cricket Frog, Indian Rice Frog (Fejervarya limnocharis, Fejervarya syhadrensis ), sitting on a stone, Owen
RMAJ5DMC–Grasshopper.
RMDAET0B–Long-legged Cricket frog (Fejervarya limnocharis, Fejervarya syhadrensis ), sitting on moss, Sri Lanka, Sinharaja Forest National Park
RMMFGXWN–RED-EYED TREE FROG (Agalychnis callidryas) leaping at cricket, Native to Central America.
RMAXPWGH–Cricket frog in the Okefenokee Swamp Georgia
RM2W9B7YD–A captive colony of crickets used to feed frogs in care at the Frogsafe Inc. headquarters in Innisfail, Queensland, Australia on 3 August 2023. Specimens gathered by Frogsafe Inc. since 1998 reveal large numbers of cancers and other ailments, perhaps linked to agricultural run off. (Photo by Joshua Prieto/Sipa USA)
RF2A0TNEA–Blanchard's Cricket Frog (Acris blanchardi) camouflaging at the edge of forest swamp, Iowa, USA.
RMEPN47W–A Florida Cricket Frog (Acris gryllus dorsalis) sits motionless among leaves on the ground in Ocala National Forest.
RFK605P9–Blanchard’s Northern Cricket Frog (Acris crepitans blanchardi) on a leaf, Ames, Iowa, USA
RFH6BM41–Rana Limnocharis group. Cricket frogs. Small frogs which have calls similar to that of crickets.
RMG5XEP4–Somerset captain Brian Langford, foreground on right, leap-frogs over a team-mate during a training session at County Cricket ground at Taunton.
RFAYRNCK–Deep-fried frog, water bug, cicada, grasshopper and maggots, Thai delicacies, Thailand, Southeast Asia
RFHY6JN7–Grass Frog (Fejervarya limnocharis)
RF2J1AYA7–River field frog, Fejervarya limnocharis, Satara, Maharashtra, India
RMAYACNN–Green treefrog eyes a cricket he will have for dinner
RF2G4YGDF–Cricket frog, Fejervarya orissaensis, Satara, Maharashtra, India
RM2J0F8H5–Portrait a close-up of a Bufo Bufo
RM2JD4J9N–Cricket Frog (Hylarana nicobariensis) from Deramakot Forest Reserve, Sabah, Borneo.
RF2T10J5M–High angle view of a long legged cricket frog (Minervarya Syhadrensis) is hiding between wild plants growing on the ground in a moisture place
RF2K8BKP7–Coastal Plain Cricket Frog (Acris gryllus gryllus) from Perry County, Mississippi, USA.
RMBC6EJ7–Grass Frog, Fejervarya limnocharis, which is also known as the Cricket Frog
RM2RFNRH1–aerial panorama of Buxton Heath nature reserve, Norfolk, United Kingdom
RFK605NN–Blanchard’s Northern Cricket Frog (Acris crepitans blanchardi) on a leaf, Ames, Iowa, USA
RMA9RNEF–Bee surprise - serious cricket frog wearing glamorous flower gown, Ruellia, waiting to surprise some food, Midwest USA
RMMFGABK–RED-EYED TREE FROG Agalychnis callidryas leaping to catch cricket
RM2CNW5K4–. Wild life near home . y wereneither tadpoles, salamanders, nor turtles. AsI was standing by the puddle, one May day, agood neighbor came along and stopped with me.The chorus was in full blast—cricket-frogs, Pick-erings frogs, spring frogs, and, leading them all,the melancholy quaver of Bufo, the hop-toad. What is it that makes the dreadful noise?my neighbor asked, meaning, I knew, by dread-ful noise, the song of the toad. I handed hermy opera-glass, pointed out the minstrel with thedoleful bagpipe sprawling at the surface of thewater, and, after sixty years of wondering, shesaw with immense
RF2BF963X–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RF2BF95W9–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RMBC38PJ–savannah cricket frog acris gryllus
RFHY6JNA–Grass Frog (Fejervarya limnocharis)
RF2BF969E–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the ugly,shieldbug
RMCW1XGT–Nurse and patient
RF2G8JYPJ–Cricket frog, Fejervarya orissaensis, Satara, Maharashtra, India
RF2BF95X6–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RM2JD4JAN–Cricket Frog (Hylarana nicobariensis) from Tabin Wildlife Reserve, Sabah, Borneo.
RF2HA261P–Red color Cricket Frog in stream, Fejervarya sp., Goa, India
RF2BF95XD–Macro ,Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RMBC68D8–Cricket Frog, Rana nicobariensis
RM2RFNRJW–aerial panorama of Marsham Heath nature reserve, Norfolk, United Kingdom
RF2BF95W2–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RMBBKGYC–Katydid Grasshopper and grey tree frog: together and alone
RF2BF964P–bugs and things,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the ugly , Beneficial Garden Bugs,Macro Wildlife Living
RMRFRN8B–. Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. . SWAMP CRICKET-FROG (CHOROPHILUS TRISERIATUS). PHOTOS BY A. A. ALLEN AND AUTHOR 1. A pair of swamp cricket-frogs. 2. A pair in position preparatory to ovulation. 3. A mated pair in act of ovulation. 4. The pair arising to surface for air after ovulation. 5. A mature tadpole. 6. An egg-mass.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Carnegie Institution of Washington.
RF2BF963H–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RMM95YNJ–Cricket frog blending in with its surroundings
RF2BF95WM–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden, are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the ugly,broad- bordered bee hawk-moth
RMPF9MW8–. The development of the frog's egg; an introduction to experimental embryology. Embryology. DEVELOPMENT OF THE FROG'S EGG [Ch. I spermatozoon in two forms in which tlie process is better known, and then consider the special case of the frog. The development of the spermatozoa of Gryllotafpa, the mole-cricket, has been described by vom Rath ('92, '95). As the process of spermatogenesis is relatively simple in this form, and as it is, according to vom Rath, much like the process that takes place in the frog, we may therefore first briefly consider the changes in Gryllotalpa. First Period. A cel
RFHYCWDF–Common Grass Frog
RF2BF960A–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RMCW1XGX–Nurse and patient
RF2BF95XR–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RFDDNY9K–Texas Grasshopper
RM2JD4JAP–Cricket Frog (Hylarana nicobariensis) from Tabin Wildlife Reserve, Sabah, Borneo.
RF2BF969P–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RMBH20CH–Cricket frog
RF2BF95NN–Macro, Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard,are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the ugly,bugs and things,Garden bug
RM2RFNRG5–aerial view of Cawston Heath nature reserve, Norfolk, United Kingdom, 3 August 2023
RF2BF9648–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RFAJMKA1–A Northern Cricket Frog at Chaplin Lake Marshes in scenic Saskatchewan Canada
RF2BF9692–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RM2CNGNYW–. Familiar life in field and forest; the animals, birds, frogs, and salamanders . ife A Savannah Cricket{Acris gryllus).. 8 FAMILIAR LIFE IN FIELD AND FOREST. from the Hyla y there are no distinct pads on thetoes,* and consequently he seldom if ever ascendstrees or bushes. His general color is variable. Withthe tree toad {Hyla versicolor) he possesses a cer-tain power of color change, or metachrosis, andwhile he may be dull green in an environment ofgreen leaves, among dead ones he is quite as like-ly to be brown. There is a very characteristicblackish, triangular patch between the eyes, theap
RF2BF9642–Macro Wildlife Living in my garden,Garden bugs in the backyard are not always a bad thing. the good, the bad and the uglybugs and things,Garden bugs
RF2J2DTR8–Different kinds of insects and animals on white background illustration
RMCNN3AG–Paddy Frog (Fejervarya limnocharis) adult, sitting on leaves, Tuaran, Sabah, Borneo, Malaysia
RFHYCWDX–Common Grass Frog
RFDDNYK7–Texas Grasshopper
RMBH20CA–Chorus frog
RM2RFNREB–aerial view of Cawston Heath nature reserve, Norfolk, United Kingdom, 3 August 2023
RM2CDA0CJ–. St. Nicholas [serial] . ?i SUMMER LIFE. BY MARGARET JANE RUSSELL, AGE 14. EVENING. BY MARGARET STEVENS (AGE II). The sunset glow lights up the darkening sky,While homeward swift the skimming swallows fly.The daylight fades, the sun sinks lower down,And radiant clouds the evenings beauty crown. The whippoorwill sends forth his mournful lay;Soft winds sing lullabies, now sad, now gay;The crickets chirp, the frogs croak loud and deep,While mothers sing their little ones to sleep. They start the dance, and trip it merrily For many hours beneath the willow-tree. A jolly cricket chirrups out the t
RF2J2DKFD–Different kinds of insects and animals on white background illustration
RFHYCWDP–Common Grass Frog
RM2RFNRJF–aerial panorama of Buxton Heath nature reserve, Norfolk, United Kingdom
RM2CNGNYJ–. Familiar life in field and forest; the animals, birds, frogs, and salamanders . I describe farther on, but it has largerfootpads. The cricket frog, or Savannah cricket (Aoris gryl-lus), a little creature a trifle over an inch long, com-monly found as far north as southern New York, isthe only known representative of this genus. Inmore southern marshes — those, for instance, ofNew Jersey—we may happen to hear both Pick-erings Hyla and the cricket frog singing in com-pany. But Acris gryllus has a distinct voice of his own.He does not whistle an uninterrupted note, butbreaks into musical crepit
RF2HWNX6D–Different kinds of insects and animals on white background illustration
RMREF1K7–. Report on the birds of Pennsylvania : with special reference to the food habits, based on over four thousand stomach examinations. Birds. Mouse. Meadow mouse ; shrew. 2 sbrewR Mole. Meadow mouse ; i shrew. ' Mice. Mole. House mouse. 2 house m ice ; white-fOf ted mouse; i mead- ow mouse. 4 meadow mice. Toad ; snake; cricket; larva. G ra sshopper ; larva; spider. G ra.sshoppera ; spider. Grasshoppers. Frogs: beetles. Beetles; craw- fish ; spider. Insects. Squash bug. 10 grasshoppers Cricket; larvae; 2 spiders Frog. do. Frog ; dragon tlies. Lizard; 2 crick- ets ; larva> of beetles. Snake; in
RF2HWWRDD–Different kinds of insects and animals on white background illustration
RM2CPDKAY–. Sharp eyes; a rambler's calendar of fifty-two weeks among insects, birds and flowers; . SpriuG T HE earliest blossom, the skunk-cabbage flower, visited by bees in snowy Marcli.— Revels of the sprouting maple-seeds. — Peeping frogs; spring music fromthe swamp : Hylodcs, Hy!n, and cricket-frog. Imitation of Hylodcs. Tree-toads in March.—Vernal greeting from the pines. Clicking cones. Hygro-metric hocus-pocus of pine-cone.—The squirrel as a botany teacher. Spiralarrangement of cone-scales.—Spring blossoms: avant-coiirricres among thewild flowers. Blossoms under snow. Poetical allusions.—Quicken