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  1. The main call you will hear a Gray Tree Frog make are their mating calls, which sound like a loud, musical, bird-like trill. Males make these sounds to both attract mates and warn rival males of their presence. Calls typically last about half a second and are repeated every few seconds.

  2. Distant choruses sound like the jingling of sleigh bells. The aggressive call is a stuttering trill, reminiscent of the calls of chorus frogs: purrrreeeek, usually rising in pitch at the end. Squeaky peeps (rain calls) are given periodically by individuals from shrubs and trees in late summer and autumn.

  3. 2 maj 2023 · There are a wide array of amphibian sounds in Massachusetts, including tree frog sounds, true frog vocalizations, and toad calls. You can hear the croaks, peeps, trills, and various other noises for much of the spring and summer, though peak calling periods vary by species.

  4. 29 lip 2021 · You’ll spot them in a wide variety of wooded habitats, from backyards to forests to swamps. But the BEST way to locate one is to listen! Once you know what to listen for, they are easy to ...

  5. 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.

  6. 18 maj 2013 · Below are links to two separate frog choruses. The first was made on the night of May 18, 2013 in Eastham, at woodland Vernal Pond E09. It contains four species of frogs calling. The loudest and most conspicuous is the grey treefrog, a species that most people are not familiar with.

  7. 15 kwi 2023 · Learn the calls of the gray tree frog, and to understand the differences between Cope's Gray Tree Frog and Eastern Gray Tree Frog sounds.

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