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  1. Gray Tree Frogs are found across eastern North America. You’ll spot them in a wide variety of wooded habitats, from backyards to forests to swamps. But the BEST way to locate a Gray Tree Frog is to listen for its mating calls! Once you know what to listen for, they are easy to identify by sound.

  2. The call of the Cope's Gray Tree Frog, a common sound in the summer in southern Maryland.

  3. 15 kwi 2023 · What Do Cope’s Gray Tree Frog Calls Sound Like? The mating call of the Cope’s Gray Treefrog, in contrast, is a trill that sounds harsher than the call of the Gray Treefrog. The pulse rate is faster compared to the Gray Treefrog when both are calling in the same area at the same time.

  4. this tree frog hangs around on my deck every night. it isn't afraid of me either. taken with pentax q and 01 prime lens, manual settings.update 9/5/2016: I h...

  5. I heard a male cope's gray tree frog (Hyla chrysoscelis) calling in my backyard and decided to track him down and try to film him vocalizing, it was a success!!

  6. 26 kwi 2023 · Some of the most familiar noises produced by tree frogs include the sound of spring peepers (which have smaller toe pads and don’t spend much time in trees), calls of gray tree frogs, and the sounds of the Pacific Tree Frog.

  7. The two gray treefrog species can be distinguished genetically and by breeding call. The male mating call of Cope's gray treefrog (H. chrysoscelis) is shorter, harsher and more forceful than H. versicolor. It is a faster call averaging 45 trills/second.

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