Green Puddle Frog aka Rough-skinned Floating Frog (Occidozyga lima), family Dicroglossidae, found in South and SE Asia
photographs by Dick Bartlett

seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Italy
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from Italy

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Spain
seen from China
Green Puddle Frog aka Rough-skinned Floating Frog (Occidozyga lima), family Dicroglossidae, found in South and SE Asia
photographs by Dick Bartlett
all tsuchako moments 037/? - movie 3
floating frog
Frog lost his feet :))
Meet the floating frogs of the paddyfields
Occidozyga lima is a species, or species complex, of small anuran that has a wide distribution in Asia. It is traded under a number of names, but species of this genus are perhaps best known as the rice paddy, puddle, and floating frogs. A small frog, O. lima grows to a mere 4 centimeters, or somewhere between 1 and 1 and a 1/2 inches, and the females are slightly larger than the males. They inhabits pond and marshlands, profiting from the seasonal inundation of grasslands in nature, and from wet rice farmers creating anthropogenic paddy environments, for their domesticated rice, which is a species of grass that grows in water. Like grazing pastures and cornfields, rice paddies are a form of man-made grassland, to which local wild animals have adapted.
This is an easy frog to care for, in an aquarium with a low water level. Because the frogs are of course sir breathers, and have the particular habit, of floating at the water surface. Some floating vegetation should be provided for these anurans, as open spaces of water stress them. Naturally, the water surface should be still, he cause these frogs are averse to living on bodies of flowing water. Needless to say, the aquarium lid must be secure, lest these frogs hop or climb out. They are willing to consume non-living prey, but only if it floats and moves on the water surface, and it must be based on arthropod protein. Some people have trained their O. lima to feed from small forceps, while others have noted these frogs can dive for food. In the wild, these frogs both consume insects at the water surface, and make temporary dives for prey.
As predators, they will try to eat any animal that can fit into their mouths, but being so small, their range of potential prey is limited, and many ornamental tank inhabitants will be unmolested. Similarly, O. lima are mutually indifferent to one another at the water surface. The optimal water pH for O. lima, based on populations from marshes and ponds in Hong Kong, and the optimum pH for rice to grow, might be 6 to 7, certainly not exceeding 7.5,and not too low either. They like daytime air tempertures of 28-30 degrees centigrade, though they are fine if it drops as low as 18 degrees at night. Others have reported success with a temperture of 23 degrees centigrade. Probably the exact preferences of the captive frogs, vary according to their source population, given the natural range of O. lima.
No need to cling to things... (Naito Josho 1662-1704)
original image from warrenphotography