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Best Tree Frog

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Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

0.0 - 10.0
Best 1 Red-eyed Leaf Frog

The Red-eyed Leaf Frog, *Agalychnis callidryas*, is a vibrant arboreal amphibian found in Central America’s rainforests. Its distinctive bright red eyes and green skin provide camouflage amongst foliage while startling potential predators. This frog is particularly notable for its unique adaptation...

2 Red-eyed Tree Frog

The Red-eyed Tree Frog, *Agalychnis callidryas*, is an arboreal amphibian native to Central America. Its striking red eyes are a key feature, utilized in a defensive display that momentarily startles potential predators. This frog’s vibrant coloration also serves as camouflage within the rainforest...

3 White's Tree Frog

White's Tree Frog (Litoria caerulea), native to Australia and New Guinea, is one of the most popular amphibian pets worldwide due to its docile temperament and longevity of up to 16 years in captivity.

4 Wallace's Flying Frog

Wallace's Flying Frog (Rhacophorus nigropalmatus) of the Malay Peninsula and Borneo, first described by Alfred Russel Wallace in 1869, uses its large, fully webbed feet to glide up to 15 meters between trees.

5 Vietnamese Mossy Frog

The Vietnamese Mossy Frog (Theloderma corticale) is a tree frog native to northern Vietnam whose warty, mottled green skin provides near-perfect camouflage against moss-covered rocks and logs.

6 Amazon Milk Frog

The Amazon Milk Frog (Trachycephalus resinifictrix) is a large arboreal frog from the Amazon Basin named for the milky toxic secretion it releases when threatened.

7 Lemur Leaf Frog

The Lemur Leaf Frog (Agalychnis lemur) is a critically endangered tree frog from Costa Rica and Panama, distinguished by striking orange eyes and partially translucent skin.

8 Giant Waxy Monkey Tree Frog

A large South American tree frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) that secretes waxy lipids across its skin to prevent dehydration and produces secretions used in traditional Amazonian kambo healing rituals.

9 White-lipped Tree Frog

The world's largest treefrog (Litoria infrafrenata), native to northeastern Australia and New Guinea, reaching body lengths of up to 14 cm.

10 Reinwardt's Flying Frog

Reinwardt's Flying Frog (Rhacophorus reinwardtii) is a Southeast Asian gliding frog native to Indonesia and Malaysia, recognized by its vivid green dorsum and yellow-and-black webbing used for controlled aerial descent.

11 Malabar Gliding Frog

A large tree frog (Rhacophorus malabaricus) endemic to the Western Ghats of India, capable of gliding between trees on extensively webbed feet, and classified as a vulnerable species.

12 Spring Peeper

Pseudacris crucifer, a tiny eastern North American tree frog, bears an X-shaped dorsal marking and produces the shrill peeping chorus widely recognized as a harbinger of spring.

13 Gray Tree Frog

The Gray Tree Frog (Hyla versicolor) is a North American species capable of surviving freezing temperatures by producing glycerol as a cryoprotectant, and is notable for being a cryptic tetraploid species.

14 Orange-eyed Tree Frog

An Australian treefrog (Litoria chloris) from coastal eastern Queensland and New South Wales, distinguished by vivid orange eyes set against bright green dorsal coloration.

15 European Tree Frog

The European Tree Frog (Hyla arborea) is a small bright-green arboreal frog found across Europe and western Asia, protected by law in many European nations.

16 Pine Barrens Tree Frog

A vibrantly colored treefrog (Hyla andersonii) endemic to New Jersey's Pine Barrens and a few disjunct populations in the Carolinas and Florida panhandle.

17 Magnificent Tree Frog

A large Australian treefrog (Litoria splendida) found only in the remote Kimberley region of Western Australia, closely related to and resembling the green tree frog.

18 American Green Tree Frog

The American Green Tree Frog (Hyla cinerea) is a slender, bright-green species native to the southeastern United States and is the official state amphibian of both Georgia and Louisiana.

19 Pacific Tree Frog

The Pacific Tree Frog (Pseudacris regilla) is the most common frog on the Pacific Coast of North America, recognized by a distinctive dark eye stripe.

20 Growling Grass Frog

Australia's largest native frog (Litoria raniformis), native to southeastern Australia and listed as vulnerable due to chytrid fungal disease and extensive wetland habitat loss.

21 Barking Tree Frog

The largest native treefrog in the United States (Hyla gratiosa), found across the southeastern states and named for its loud, resonant bark-like advertisement call.

22 Japanese Tree Frog

The Japanese Tree Frog (Dryophytes japonicus) is a small arboreal frog native to Japan, China, Korea, and Russia, notable for calling most actively during rainy periods.

23 Cope's Gray Tree Frog

A diploid North American treefrog (Hyla chrysoscelis) that is the sibling species of H. versicolor, distinguishable only by call frequency and chromosome count.

24 Boreal Chorus Frog

Pseudacris maculata, ranging from the Arctic Circle south to New Mexico across central and western North America, is one of the most northerly-distributed chorus frogs in the world.

25 Mexican Tree Frog

Smilisca baudinii is a large hylid tree frog ranging from southern Texas through Central America, known for explosive breeding aggregations triggered by the onset of heavy rains.

26 Canyon Tree Frog

A rock-dwelling treefrog (Hyla arenicolor) native to desert canyons of the American Southwest and northern Mexico, its mottled gray skin camouflaging it against sandstone.

27 Rhacophorus dulitensis

A foam-nesting tree frog (Rhacophorus dulitensis) of the family Rhacophoridae native to Borneo, first described from specimens collected on Mount Dulit in Sarawak, Malaysia.

28 Squirrel Tree Frog

A small, highly variable treefrog (Hyla squirella) of the southeastern U.S. that produces a nasal, raspy call and rapidly changes color in response to temperature shifts.

29 Long-nosed Tree Frog

A tree frog distinguished by an elongated, pointed snout, found in tropical forests of Southeast Asia or New Guinea, where the nasal projection likely aids camouflage among leaf litter and vegetation.

30 Bird-voiced Tree Frog

A small southeastern U.S. treefrog (Hyla avivoca) named for its birdlike whistle call, inhabiting flooded swamp forests from Illinois south to the Gulf Coast.

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