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12 frogs seen in a stream during a 2.5 hours daylight survey, many eggs (photo) & even at least 6 tadpoles
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15 seen during a 3 hours night survey
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15 seen during a 3 hours night survey
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29 frogs seen during a 3 hours night survey, many tadpoles in the stream
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29 frogs seen during a 3 hours night survey, many tadpoles in the stream
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43 frogs seen during a 3 hours night survey, also many tadpoles and already quite a few neo metamorphosed frogs
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Mountain Yellow legged frogs and tadpoles in lower of two small pond at 11,200 feet, Bubbs Creek, Kings Canyon National Park, CA
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Mountain Yellow legged frogs and tadpoles in lower of two small pond at 11,200 feet, Bubbs Creek, Kings Canyon National Park, CA
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Mountain Yellow legged frogs and tadpoles in lower of two small pond at 11,200 feet, Bubbs Creek, Kings Canyon National Park, CA
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Mountain Yellow legged frogs and tadpoles in lower of two small pond at 11,200 feet, Bubbs Creek, Kings Canyon National Park, CA
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Mt. yellow legged frog (Rana muscosa) dead from Chytrid fungus, Hitchcock Lake ponds, west of Mt. Whitney, Sequoia National Park, CA. In the entire Whitney Creek drainage, there were only two breeding ponds of the yellow legged frog left in 2002 when Chytrid fungus broke out among juvenile frogs, wiping the entire population out. By 2008, there were no frogs left in the entire drainage.
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OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
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Adult Frog, and egg sac
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Adult Frog, and egg sac
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Couldn't catch it, alas! But a beautiful frog!
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