Bone claws, oxygen-absorbing “hair,” and hands-on frog dads. Meet the hairy frog (or wolverine frog), one of nature’s strangest amphibians.
Male green treefrogs attract mates with loud calls, but new research shows parasites can subtly change those signals.
The arrival of March brings both people and nature out of their winter hiding spots. When the planet revolves and rotates ...
Across the animal kingdom, sound is more than communication—it's a signal of survival and success. From birds and primates to ...
Writer and director Ian Tuason tells IndieWire about why the sounds coming from the ceiling help enhance a podcaster's worst ...
Reptiles shed their skin, but not all of them do so equally. Discover the differences between snakes and amphibians when it ...
DNA analysis reveals a fanged frog scientists thought was one species for nearly 200 years is actually several hidden species ...
The genus Gracixalus belongs to the family of Old World Tree Frogs and is geographically dispersed from Myanmar and western Thailand to Laos, Vietnam, and further to southern China. Despite the ...
Two green toads float quietly in shallow water, barely moving as their eyes stay locked on the surface. At first it feels calm, but this kind of stillness often hides something important—mating ...
Frogs are interesting creatures, but they are best admired in marshes and other natural habitats, not on your front porch.
Some animal facts sound like they were invented for shock value, but then you check the research and realize they are ...
They used to be classified in the same family as what we call tree frogs, like the Grey Treefrog (another great noisy animal) in genus Hyla, but have been recently reclassified to the genus Pseudacris ...
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