Hello everyone, This is officially my first post on the forum. Im 20 years old and have been herping for about 4-5 years now. Im from central Pennsylvania and am quite quiet in the herp community having a very small fan base on my instagram. The reason I am posting is because I recently took a 3 week long trip to Ecuador to go herping and birding. Among my travels, I came across quite a few species that I wasn't able to identify. I was hoping somebody could help identifying some of the species I have found. Pictures are listed below, there was 5 frog species and 2 snake species. Any help would be greatly appreciated. All herp species were found near the Tena (border of Amazon) Eastern area of Ecuador
Frog Number One :
Frog Number Two :
\
Frog Number Three :
Frog Number Four :
Frog Number Five :
Snake Number One :
(This snake was most likely some sort of water snake judging by it's bands and we did find it in a nearby pond, however our tour guide said that it was a venomous species, but I don't think it is. I kept my distance just to be safe)
Snake Number Two :
(Found DOR)
Ecuador Trip (Reposted)
Moderator: Scott Waters
Ecuador Trip (Reposted)
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- Paul Freed
- Posts: 130
- Joined: November 10th, 2013, 12:14 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest (Oregon) U.S.
Re: Ecuador Trip (Reposted)
Hi JW, thank you for your first official post! It seems that all of your photos have gone through some sort of weird compression, resulting in an elongate appearance of the subjects. That is making identification of some of the subjects a bit difficult.
That said, the first frog in your post is a Giant Gladiator Treefrog, (known by other common names, such as a Rusty Treefrog), Boana boans. Frog image number 3, is the highly variable, Triangle Tree Frog, Dendropsophus triangulum.
Frog #4 appears to be a Painted Antnest Frog, Lithodytes lineatus, although it's difficult to see the frog clearly.
Snake #1 is a Mountain Keelback, Helicops angulatus, and snake #2 is a Northern Cat-eyed Snake, Leptodeira septentrionalis.
There are some additional herps in your original post that didn't make it into this revised post but I will take a look and see what you have there. Hope you had a nice time in Ecuador and that you continue to share your herping experience here on FHF.
Best,
Paul
That said, the first frog in your post is a Giant Gladiator Treefrog, (known by other common names, such as a Rusty Treefrog), Boana boans. Frog image number 3, is the highly variable, Triangle Tree Frog, Dendropsophus triangulum.
Frog #4 appears to be a Painted Antnest Frog, Lithodytes lineatus, although it's difficult to see the frog clearly.
Snake #1 is a Mountain Keelback, Helicops angulatus, and snake #2 is a Northern Cat-eyed Snake, Leptodeira septentrionalis.
There are some additional herps in your original post that didn't make it into this revised post but I will take a look and see what you have there. Hope you had a nice time in Ecuador and that you continue to share your herping experience here on FHF.
Best,
Paul
Re: Ecuador Trip (Reposted)
Frog 1: Boana boans, Gladiator Treefrog
Frog 3: Dendropsophus, hard to tell probably triangulum. There are several species around Tena and all are quite variable.
Frog 4: Leptodactylus lineatus
Frog 5: Phyllomedusa, maybe tarsius
Snake 1: Helicops angulatus, Brown-banded Watersnake
Snake 2: Leptodiera annulata, Cat-eyed Snake
Dan
Frog 3: Dendropsophus, hard to tell probably triangulum. There are several species around Tena and all are quite variable.
Frog 4: Leptodactylus lineatus
Frog 5: Phyllomedusa, maybe tarsius
Snake 1: Helicops angulatus, Brown-banded Watersnake
Snake 2: Leptodiera annulata, Cat-eyed Snake
Dan
Re: Ecuador Trip (Reposted)
hmm, that is weird, I had to use a program to resize all the images to proper sizes, so that maybe why. I will try to fix that in future posts. Thank you again for helping with the identifications it helped alot and i appreciate it!Paul Freed wrote:Hi JW, thank you for your first official post! It seems that all of your photos have gone through some sort of weird compression, resulting in an elongate appearance of the subjects. That is making identification of some of the subjects a bit difficult.
That said, the first frog in your post is a Giant Gladiator Treefrog, (known by other common names, such as a Rusty Treefrog), Boana boans. Frog image number 3, is the highly variable, Triangle Tree Frog, Dendropsophus triangulum.
Frog #4 appears to be a Painted Antnest Frog, Lithodytes lineatus, although it's difficult to see the frog clearly.
Snake #1 is a Mountain Keelback, Helicops angulatus, and snake #2 is a Northern Cat-eyed Snake, Leptodeira septentrionalis.
There are some additional herps in your original post that didn't make it into this revised post but I will take a look and see what you have there. Hope you had a nice time in Ecuador and that you continue to share your herping experience here on FHF.
Best,
Paul
Re: Ecuador Trip (Reposted)
Thank you very much this helped alot!DanW wrote:Frog 1: Boana boans, Gladiator Treefrog
Frog 3: Dendropsophus, hard to tell probably triangulum. There are several species around Tena and all are quite variable.
Frog 4: Leptodactylus lineatus
Frog 5: Phyllomedusa, maybe tarsius
Snake 1: Helicops angulatus, Brown-banded Watersnake
Snake 2: Leptodiera annulata, Cat-eyed Snake
Dan