I have spent well over 30 years catching bucketful's of tree frogs around NW Georgia. I grew up steeped in tree frogs around my parent's pool and reveled in their night song on a stormy night. All this frog study while amateur, has filled me with anecdotal knowledge of their breeding habits, timeframes, feeding, etc. Throughout all this childhood frog obsession I documented lots of gray tree frogs, bullfrogs, toads, but never once I have I seen the Green variety of tree frog. Either I have been unlucky for 30 years or they are rare. Another potential theory is the 500 year flood we just had threw the natural range off in some species. I have seen more vultures than I can ever recall. Maybe the additional flying insect surge that comes with high waters is the cause. Whatever the reason/purpose of the appearance of these emerald green beauties I made a full study as one might expect. Loads of Green Tree Frog NW Georgia sighting follows:
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