10-Minutes Amazing Life on MSN

I saw this toad inflate its throat to call

A toad inflates its throat sac while remaining mostly still in the water. This behavior is part of its calling display to attract mates.
If it quacks like a duck, it’s a wood frog. If it sounds like sleigh bells jingling, it’s a spring peeper. If it sounds like someone shaking ball bearings in a tin can, that’s a rare Blanchard’s ...
Animals do all sorts of things to attract each other as potential mates. Many birds, for example, produce feathers with ...
They used to be classified in the same family as what we call tree frogs, like the Grey Treefrog (another great noisy animal) in genus Hyla, but have been recently reclassified to the genus Pseudacris ...
All the Latest Game Footage and Images from Toads of Trees A Gorilla Tag inspired game where you play as a toad and can basically do anything. Games metadata is powered by IGDB.com We may earn a ...
The genus Gracixalus belongs to the family of Old World Tree Frogs and is geographically dispersed from Myanmar and western Thailand to Laos, Vietnam, and further to southern China. Despite the ...
Scientists suggest female frogs listen for changes in the male calls as a signal for when it's warm enough to mate.
A study of over 275 violins suggests that Antonio Stradivari used wood from high-altitude forests in northern Italy to craft some of his most renowned instruments.
These tiny frogs have an enormous voice for their size, and the recent warm evenings have been filled with their lovely chorus.
From sandhill cranes over the Rio Grande to canyon frogs in Havasu, explore the wild sounds that signal spring across the ...
Come April, armed with phones binoculars, people across India will turn their gaze to nature. From roadside trees to city lakes, thousands join the City Nature Challenge, a four-day global bioblitz to ...
You don't have to touch the frogs and toads; just listen for their distinctive croaks and chirps. And Friends of the Rouge will teach you how.