Summary[edit] Description: English: Adult Roth's tree frog on the edge of a drinking glass. Date: 21 October 2017. Source: Own work. Author: Bignoter. Camera location16° 49′ 24″ S, 145° 42′ 57″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-16.823333; 145.715833.
I took this photo of a Roth's Tree Frog (Litoria rothii) on the wall at my home near Cooktown, Queensland, Australia in 2005. John E. Hill 03:17, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
Summary[edit] Description: The en:Northern Barred Frog (Mixophyes schevilli) of northern Australia. Date: 4 December 2006. Source: Sent to en:User:LiquidGhoul by post. Author: Damon Ramsey of www.educational-tours.com.au. Permission(Reusing this file): Hand written letter releasing the contents of the CD to Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 2.5.
Summary[edit] Description: The Shenandoah salamander is a small, terrestrial woodland salamander found only within the Shenandoah National Park. Salamanders are important, ecologically, because of their predation on insects and other invertebrates, soil aeration and influence on soil dynamics brought about by burrowing, and they are a food source to other forest animals. Their predation on insects also influences ecosystem processes such as decomposition.Like other high-elevation species, this salamander is severely threatened by climate change, which is expected to result in dramatic temperature and moisture changes in the Appalachians. Credit: Matthew Stover, USGS. Date: 8 November 2013, 07:53. Source: Shenandoah Salamander and Climate. Author: U.S. Geological Survey from Reston, VA, USA.