Recent Herp Discussion | | | | | | | Online Users: 125 | | 63 members and 62 guests | | ad, amazonian, andy23, Angharat, antaresia childreni, arbordan, Aslan, bella7, bigi, bk ross, bump73, Carpetcleaner, champo, Chimera, cjpossum, clippy, cmclean, daniel0, darkangel, Dave94, della91, dfelt18, Ersatz, FROGGIESrCUTEo_O, funcouple, gar1, grimbeny, GSXR_Boy, Hoon84, Hsut77, Jason, jazza12, Jewly, Kenshin, knicko, Leezel73, LullabyLizard, mick_304, missllamathuen, Mitch Kelly, MrKite, No-two, Paul Atkinson, Puggs, pythonguy26, pythonman, ravynne, Scotty1, Skot_WA, spongebob, ssssnakeman, swaddo, tarzan, thepythonpit, Troy K., VinceFASSW, Whimsey, White Wolf, xshadowx | |  | | 
01-Dec-05, 08:07 PM
| | Regular Member | Join Date: Mar-05 Location: Central Coast, NSW Age: 38 | | |
Hello,
I'm wanting some help I.D'ing new frog in the backyard. We have tadpole in another pond, would be intesting to see if they match (tadpole - frogs) are we breeding colonies. One step at a time.
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01-Dec-05, 08:11 PM
|  | Regular Member | Join Date: Mar-04 Location: South-West Brisbane | | | |
Litoria fallax, Dwaft Tree Frog/Eastern Sedgefrog.
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01-Dec-05, 08:11 PM
|  | Regular Member | Join Date: Jun-05 Location: Sydney, Aust. | | | |
Litoria fallax (dwarf TF) my guess
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01-Dec-05, 08:16 PM
|  | Regular Member | Join Date: Jun-05 Location: Sydney, Aust. | | | |
Dicco, both posted at 9.11pm but looks like you won :wink:
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01-Dec-05, 08:31 PM
|  | Regular Member | | | | | Litoria fallax
My best guess is Litoria fallax.
Does it have an orange groin & thighs & have a high-pitched call that sounds like "wr-e-e-e-k...wr-e-e-e-k...wr-e-e-e-k ?
There's a recorded version on the following website to check against.
Do the tadpoles have spotted tails  :
Here's a link to the species in an excellent Australian Frog Database called 'Frogs Australia' :- http://frogsaustralia.net.au/frogs/d...fm?frog_id=152
This is an invaluable recourse that I highly recommend you add to your favourites &/or become a member of, if you're interested in ID'ing frogs.
I wish we had something similar for reptiles :idea:
zen
Edit:- I can't prove it, but I actually won with 9.09. :wink:
- My message just took longer to type | 
01-Dec-05, 08:38 PM
|  | Regular Member | Join Date: Mar-04 Location: South-West Brisbane | | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by olivehydra Dicco, both posted at 9.11pm but looks like you won :wink: | Haha, great minds think alike | 
01-Dec-05, 09:16 PM
| | Regular Member | Join Date: Mar-05 Location: Central Coast, NSW Age: 38 | | | |
World domination is near if the tadpole and frog match in a few years world domination through frog's next how do I control them (hah- hah -hah). On a serious side these are the taddies in the other pond.
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01-Dec-05, 09:34 PM
|  | Regular Member | | | | |
Thanks for the taddy pics.
Definitely spotted tails there!
Looks like it's L. fallax then.
Can you have a closer look at the adults to confirm?
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05-Jan-06, 08:43 PM
| | Regular Member | Join Date: Mar-05 Location: Central Coast, NSW Age: 38 | | |
Made a new discovery this evening, Great barred frog near the pool. Left in this thread because of the photo's of the taddies, as a reference? | 
05-Jan-06, 09:05 PM
|  | Regular Member | | | |
That's a great Great-barred Frog there :wink:
Excellent close-up of it!
What sort of camera do you have  :
Terrific quality images.
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05-Jan-06, 09:33 PM
| | Regular Member | Join Date: Mar-05 Location: Central Coast, NSW Age: 38 | | | |
Hi, Zen.
The camera's a Nikon Coolpix 8700, cost a small fortune a year or so back, my partner's a graphic artist and need's the best.
Did you check out the middle photo, and the pad's on the feet, so cool.
Rakie
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05-Jan-06, 10:38 PM
|  | Regular Member | | | |
Thanks for the camera specs Rakie.
Cool camera the Coolpix
So compact too!.
Gotta love Mixophyes fasciolatus.
I used to have one that was the boss of the pond called "Hannibal".
She (females grow bigger) ate the smaller species of frog that came to her pond!
Did you know they're cannibalistic?
They might chow down a fallax if they could catch them. fallax is pretty quick though :wink:
Yeah, those tubercles are well illustrated in that shot.
Nice one
Cheers, zen
P.S - Are you an exponent of that massage style or is that your name  :
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05-Jan-06, 10:55 PM
|  | Subscriber | Join Date: Dec-05 Location: Brisbane Australia Age/Gender: 22  | | |
All i know is now i want a frog... as well as some of the lizards and snakes from numerous other posts...
I thought the first frog was cool and then when i saw the second one... geez, i want one! The first picture of it is so CUTE! It looks like its wearing gold blush!!! | 
06-Jan-06, 06:11 PM
| | Regular Member | Join Date: Mar-05 Location: Central Coast, NSW Age: 38 | | | |
Ash, as in field of dreams, put in a pond and they will come, we have native fish that eat mossie larvae but not frog larvae. Have found turtles, silver skinks (don't know there name), garden skinks, blue tongues, and frogs, in the backyard. Will go and take pictures of the ponds and creek for you if the lights not bad.
Zen, the coolpix is a 8 mega pixel camera and we can take small movies with it.I have learnt Remedial and Therapeutic massage but not Reiki yet, my family call me Rakie short for Marijke (Mar-raker), I have Dutch heritage.
Regards,
Rakie
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13-Jan-06, 12:44 PM
|  | Regular Member | | | |
Interesting wrap there Rakie.
Just a coincidence that you do massage as well.
Me too actually. I do *****su, Swedish, intuitive Reiki style. Often blending them together.
I'm curious about the "silver skink". Can you give a more detailed description?
Also what species of native fish do you have in your frog pond  :
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