It’s not easy being green…or so sang Kermit the Frog. It is easy though, to identify the frogs that you encounter while you’re out looking for birds that you can’t find. And while this blog is a birding blog, blogging about just birds in July is impossible because the birds are busy avoiding the blazing sun. So it’s frog time! I have five species of frog to share with you today, all native New Yorkers.

The first frog I’ll bring up is one of the easiest and most common, the American Bullfrog (Rana catesbeina). Though it may sound like a drunkard demanding more drink when it calls out a deep, resonating “Jug o’ Rum” it is not actually requesting booze but trying to attract the females. Though after seeing what the female frogs look like you can’t really help wondering if maybe the male frogs are demanding rum. Either way, the result of Bullfrog relations is tadpoles that actually take two years to become frogs, though they look pretty froggish even as tadpoles. If you see a big frog (biggest in North America) with green to yellow coloration and a lighter belly it is most likely a Bullfrog.

Jug O' Rum!  Now!

American Bullfrog at Five Rivers

Frog number two has a call that sounds like the twang of a banjo and an incredibly uninventive name. The, wait for it, Green Frog (Rana clamitans), is common across the eastern United States and Canada and is readily identified by its large tympanic membrane (the round thing behind their eyes that frogs use to hear) and prominent dorsolateral ridges.

Green Frog Head-on

Green Frog at Five Rivers

Green Frog

Check out those dorsolateral ridges!

Mink Frogs (Rana septentrionalis) are a northern species, found in the United States only in Wisconsin, Minnesota, northern Michigan and upstate New York. Their breeding is late compared to other North American frogs, with most eggs being laid in June and July. If you are in a northern bog and see a dark frog with a paler green color on the lower part of its face it is most likely a Mink Frog [Correction, thanks to commenter “A” and confirmed by Nick: if you see a frog like that without striping on its legs you likely have a Mink Frog].  If you want to see an actual Mink Frog, check out Nick’s post.

Green Frog in Bloomingdale Bog

Mink Frog Green Frog in Bloomingdale Bog

The frog with the dark stripe that runs from the eye to the ear drum is the Wood Frog (Rana sylvatica). As its name suggests, it prefers moist woodlands, though, like other frogs, it lays its eggs in water. There really is no mistaking this frog for other species in North America.

Wood Frog

Wood Frog on trail to Wakely Mountain

The Northern Spring Peeper‘s (Pseudacris crucifer) single note calls are a harbinger of spring. These tiny frogs that max out at an inch and a half have voices that outsize their bodies. Their small size, the “X” that is present on their backs, and their consistent calling in spring are their best field marks. The tadpoles of Northern Spring Peepers become fully sized adult frogs by August at the latest.

Northern Spring Peeper

A Northern Spring Peeper sitting on my mother’s arm in Saugerties, NY

So when the birds are quiet and you don’t feel like studying bugs take some time to look in puddles, ponds, streams, and marshes. You will be wonderfully entertained by the wide variety of frogs you can find and identify. And who knows, if you kiss enough of them, maybe you will find a prince or princess!

Written by Corey
Corey is a New Yorker who lived most of his life in upstate New York but has lived in Queens since 2008. He's only been birding since 2005 but has garnered a respectable life list by birding whenever he wasn't working as a union representative or spending time with his family. He lives in Forest Hills with Daisy and Desmond Shearwater. His bird photographs have appeared on the Today Show, in Birding, Living Bird Magazine, Bird Watcher's Digest, and many other fine publications. He is also the author of the American Birding Association Field Guide to the Birds of New York.