Top Banner
FROGS
22

FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Dec 14, 2015

Download

Documents

Larissa Bradham
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

FROGS

Page 2: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Page 3: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Northern Spring Peeper

Page 4: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

These little frogs are the size of a quarter. You hear them calling “peep peep peep” from ponds and ditches on warm spring nights, But they don’t live in ponds or ditches, they live in trees!

They eat small spiders, moth larvae and water midges.

Page 5: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

GREEN FROG

Page 6: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Green Frogs are common in lakes,

ponds and streams.Green Frogs eat a

great variety of small land and water

creatures. Beetles, bugs, spiders, ants,

moth larvae and snails are the big items.

Page 7: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

WOOD FROG

Page 8: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Wood Frogs are brown or tan-

coloured. A dark brown mask on the

sides of the head has earned them the nickname "robber

frog”.

Wood Frog eggs

Wood Frog tadpole

Page 9: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Wood Frogs live in damp forests or mixed

woods.They eat a variety

of insects and other small

invertebrates, especially spiders,

beetles, bugs, moth larvae, slugs

and snails.

Page 10: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Northern Leopard Frog

Page 11: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Northern Leopard Frogs, also called meadow or grass frogs, are bright grass-green with oval black spots.

You may see them in old fields, meadows, grassy-sedge woods roads and grassy roadside ditches.

Page 12: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Leopard Frogs eat many insects and other

invertebrates. Since they spend so much time in

grassy places, they eat a lot of agricultural pest

insects

Page 13: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Pickerel Frog

Page 14: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Pickerel Frogs are spotted, but with odd shaped rectangular brown spots in rows.Pickerel frogs are especially common along streams and

lake shores

Page 15: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Pickerel Frogs eat ants, spiders, bugs, beetles, sawfly larvae, moth larva and a variety of other insects.

Page 16: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

MINK FROG

Page 17: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Mink Frogs are generally green to

brown, often spotted or mottled. Their

preferred habitat is quiet waters with lots of plants like lily pads and pickerel weed.

Page 18: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Mink Frogs eat a variety of land and water

creatures, particularly ants, beetles, bugs,

moth larvae, spiders and flies.

When picked up, they smell like a mink (or rotting onions, if you can't quite recall the

odour of mink).

Page 19: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

BULLFROG

Page 20: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

Bullfrogs are our largest frog. They are found in

quiet coves of lakes with lots of vegetation,

especially water lilies. Most are green or yellow-green,

but sometimes a blue Bullfrog turns up.

Page 21: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

The Bullfrog menu includes birds, other frogs, fish, even

their own tadpoles, as well as the usual insects. When held

by the hind legs, Bullfrogs may let out a startling scream or

squeal.

How to hold a BullfrogBullfrog tadpole

Page 22: FROGS. Seven kinds of frogs live in Nova Scotia.

There are 2,770 species of frogs

known in the world.