Little Grass Frog (Pseudacris ocularis), family Hylidae, found in the SE United States
The smallest species of frog in the U.S.
photos: Lucas Geurs, Ryan McGreevy, & Nicole Dahrouge
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Poland
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Uzbekistan
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from Belarus
seen from United States

seen from South Korea

seen from Israel
seen from China
Little Grass Frog (Pseudacris ocularis), family Hylidae, found in the SE United States
The smallest species of frog in the U.S.
photos: Lucas Geurs, Ryan McGreevy, & Nicole Dahrouge
chrysocolla malachite chorus frog
Upland Chorus Frog (Pseudacris feriarum), taken March 11, 2026, in Georgia, US
A beautiful chorus frog sitting in the leaves at the edge of a flooded field! This lovely individual sat nice and still for me after I scared it by accidentally walking near its spot. This is the first adult chorus frog I've seen, and I was surprised at how large it was compared to the juveniles I've found. I'm assuming it was waiting around for nightfall, camping out in a good spot until it's time to party! If you zoom in, you can see in the top image that my shuffling around the frog stirred the leaves up a bit and scared a tiny globular springtail (a new species for me!) onto its back. That was a pleasant surprise when I was reviewing the photos at home!
Ornate chorus frogs (Pseudacris ornata) By: Robert S. Simmons From: Living Amphibians of the World 1966
June 2025's Tiny Reptile and Mini Amphibian pin designs: Western Hooknose Snake and Upland Chorus Frog 🐸 🎵
These designs are available as pins and stickers on my Patreon until the end of day tomorrow and will ship in June! These will be the last enamel pins for a while because of the tariffs.
Spring peeper ‼️🗣️
Some native Illinois animals and plants that I drew for a work event earlier this month! Uncolored versions of these were printed out as a coloring activity for kids (and fun-loving adults :3). It was a really fun time! I think the butterfly was the most popular choice to color in.
Animals clockwise from upper right: Monarch Butterfly, Plains Garter Snake, Boreal Chorus Frog, White-Tailed Deer, Red-Tailed Hawk
Plants clockwise from upper right: Common Milkweed, Cardinal Flower, Compass Plant, Big Bluestem, Blue Flag Iris
big beautiful brown eyes >>>