Well that was quite strange. I was just twittering about the lizards in my back yard eating bees & roaches. Sounds pretty lame after viewing the bullfrog video. Fascinating stuff frogboys!
hi fitzcharming – well the National Geographic Channel even makes the frogboy’s pond seem rather tame! Backyard action is always exciting to watch, we agree with you there.
Question, last year when cleaning out my small pond, i found two small bird skeletons on the bottom. Could my pond frogs have birds for dinner but left the bones? Its been a puzzle to us.
Hi Sharon – that sounds suspicious, indeed. Usually the frogs eat everything bird, bones beak–the whole shebang. We haven’t seen anything about frog regurgitation here at frogboys HQ, so it’s likely those birds died from another cause.
Ancient (evolving nearly 200 million years ago, they walked among the dinosaurs);
Fish out of water, sort of (they’re the first four-footed ancestors of fish, the earth’s original tetrapods);
The first land animals with vocal chords;
And that it’s not the females but the males who talk a lot (owing to those expandable air sacs at their throats);
Revered in cultures as diverse as India and Peru, Egypt and ancient Greece and Rome;
Of two worlds, creatures of land and water;
Can leap 20 times their body length;
Range in size from ½ inch to a foot-long 7-pounder;
Comprise more than 4,900 species worldwide (not counting many that scientists haven’t discovered yet).
Fertilize their eggs outside the female’s body in most species;
That this happens during a mating embrace called amplexus;
They’re exceptionally vulnerable to climate change, invasive species, pollution and pesticides and a host of other human activities.
Please, won’t you love a frog today?
Which Frog Are You?
Do you ever confuse the inside of your head for the whole wide world of possibility?
Tibetan Buddhist holy man Patrul Rinpoche told the
story of an old frog who had lived all his life in a dank well.
One day a frog from the sea paid him a visit.
“Where do you come from?" asked the frog in the well.
“From the great ocean," he replied.
“How big is your ocean?"
“It's gigantic!“
“You mean about a quarter of the size of my well here?”
“Bigger."
“Bigger? You mean half as big?"
“No, even bigger."
“Is it as big as this well?"
“There's no comparison!”
“That's impossible! I've got to see this for myself."
They set off together.
When the frog from the well saw the ocean, it was such a shock that his head just exploded into pieces.
The Staff
The place is wo(manned) by Margaret Roach, Frogboy Mama, and Anastasia Smith, Head Frog Stylist. No experiments or tests were performed on live frogs in the making of this blog.
May 30, 2009 - January 3, 2010 'Frogs: A Chorus of Colors' reopens at the American Museum of Natural History (where you'll be able to check out the handsome boy above).
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Well that was quite strange. I was just twittering about the lizards in my back yard eating bees & roaches. Sounds pretty lame after viewing the bullfrog video. Fascinating stuff frogboys!
I think that was to much information for me. The frogboys are not very picky as to what they eat.
hi fitzcharming – well the National Geographic Channel even makes the frogboy’s pond seem rather tame! Backyard action is always exciting to watch, we agree with you there.
Question, last year when cleaning out my small pond, i found two small bird skeletons on the bottom. Could my pond frogs have birds for dinner but left the bones? Its been a puzzle to us.
Hi Sharon – that sounds suspicious, indeed. Usually the frogs eat everything bird, bones beak–the whole shebang. We haven’t seen anything about frog regurgitation here at frogboys HQ, so it’s likely those birds died from another cause.