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Southern Orange-eyed Treefrog (Litoria chloris) - wiki
Subject: Southern Orange-eyed Treefrog (Litoria chloris) - wiki
Litoria chloris yellowspots-Southern Orange-eyed Treefrog (Litoria chloris).jpg
Resolution: 1259x659 File Size: 393835 Bytes Date: 2005:12:26 20:36:43 Camera: NIKON D70 (NIKON CORPORATION) F number: f/3.7 Exposure: 10/5000 sec Focal Length: 900/10 Upload Date: 2007:08:20 14:13:19

Southern Orange-eyed Treefrog (Litoria chloris) - wiki


Litoria chloris
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[Photo] A rare morph of Litoria chloris with yellow dots on its back. Out of my many Litoria chloris that I have seen this is the only one with these dots. Photo by Froggydarb http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Froggydarb

Litoria chloris, also commonly known as the Red-eyed Tree Frog, is a species of tree frog native to eastern Australia; ranging from north of Sydney to Proserpine in mid-northern Queensland.

Physical description
The Red-eyed Tree Frog is a uniform bright green above and bright yellow on the underside. The front side of the arms and legs are green, while the underside is yellow or white. The thighs may be blue/purple to blue/black in colour in adults. It has golden eyes at the centre, which change to red towards the edge of the eye. The intensity of the eye colour is variable between frogs. The tympanum is visible and a mature frog reaches a size of 65 millimetres.

In rare cases this frog may have a series of randomly placed yellow dots on its back. (See image)

The tadpoles are generally grey or brown, and can have gold pigment along the side.

A similar species, the Orange-thighed Frog (Litoria xantheroma) is found north of Proserpine and has orange on the back of the thighs.

Ecology and behaviour
This species of frog is associated with rainforest, wet sclerophyll forest and woodland. The call is several long, moaning "aaa-rk", followed by soft trills. Males call and breeding takes place mostly after rain in temporary ponds, roadside ditches, dams, ponds and creek offshoots were the water is not flowing.

The skin secretions of the red-eyed tree frog have been found to destroy the HIV (the virus that causes AIDS), without harming healthy T-cells. The peptides which destroy HIV are the same as those of White's Tree Frog, but the Red-eyed Tree Frog produces it in larger quantites.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litoria_chloris
The text in this page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article shown in above URL. It is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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