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Osservate circa 20 ovature di Rana temporaria sul decorso di un canale di scolo di una presa di acquedotto
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My first eggs ;) in that season :) adults hide themselves in a mud :(( allways lots of frogs here in the spring time.
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My first eggs ;) in that season :) adults hide themselves in a mud :(( allways lots of frogs here in the spring time.
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Probably not only... massive migration on the road and loads in the pond.
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Probably not only... massive migration on the road and loads in the pond.
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Probably not only... massive migration on the road and loads in the pond.
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Probably not only... massive migration on the road and loads in the pond.
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Osservati 3 adulti, di cui 2 in accoppiamento, in una pozza con già 12 ovature
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Osservate ovature e numerosi girini
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10 ovature
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5 ovature
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5 ovature
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10 ovature
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I can't help, to me these snouts are short and rounded (rather than tapered). So, R. temporaria. Also the calls are different from those of R. arvensis in that there are no singular calls but just a continuous growling. Despite the large number of frogs, the sound is so low that you must be close to the pool (within 10 m) to hear it. At first I took it for the sound of the wind in the high trees. The last pic shows frog spawn in a (last year) newly excavated hole on the other side of the carriage way, the construction of which many years ago may have caused the formation of the small pool with the frogs. I've heard on Youtube that the frogs should loose their wariness when spawning is in full swing. Maybe the low temperatures (below 10°C) that we have since Mach 18 have precluded that until now.
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I can't help, to me these snouts are short and rounded (rather than tapered). So, R. temporaria. Also the calls are different from those of R. arvensis in that there are no singular calls but just a continuous growling. Despite the large number of frogs, the sound is so low that you must be close to the pool (within 10 m) to hear it. At first I took it for the sound of the wind in the high trees. The last pic shows frog spawn in a (last year) newly excavated hole on the other side of the carriage way, the construction of which many years ago may have caused the formation of the small pool with the frogs. I've heard on Youtube that the frogs should loose their wariness when spawning is in full swing. Maybe the low temperatures (below 10°C) that we have since Mach 18 have precluded that until now.
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I can't help, to me these snouts are short and rounded (rather than tapered). So, R. temporaria. Also the calls are different from those of R. arvensis in that there are no singular calls but just a continuous growling. Despite the large number of frogs, the sound is so low that you must be close to the pool (within 10 m) to hear it. At first I took it for the sound of the wind in the high trees. The last pic shows frog spawn in a (last year) newly excavated hole on the other side of the carriage way, the construction of which many years ago may have caused the formation of the small pool with the frogs. I've heard on Youtube that the frogs should loose their wariness when spawning is in full swing. Maybe the low temperatures (below 10°C) that we have since Mach 18 have precluded that until now.
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I can't help, to me these snouts are short and rounded (rather than tapered). So, R. temporaria. Also the calls are different from those of R. arvensis in that there are no singular calls but just a continuous growling. Despite the large number of frogs, the sound is so low that you must be close to the pool (within 10 m) to hear it. At first I took it for the sound of the wind in the high trees. The last pic shows frog spawn in a (last year) newly excavated hole on the other side of the carriage way, the construction of which many years ago may have caused the formation of the small pool with the frogs. I've heard on Youtube that the frogs should loose their wariness when spawning is in full swing. Maybe the low temperatures (below 10°C) that we have since Mach 18 have precluded that until now.
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I can't help, to me these snouts are short and rounded (rather than tapered). So, R. temporaria. Also the calls are different from those of R. arvensis in that there are no singular calls but just a continuous growling. Despite the large number of frogs, the sound is so low that you must be close to the pool (within 10 m) to hear it. At first I took it for the sound of the wind in the high trees. The last pic shows frog spawn in a (last year) newly excavated hole on the other side of the carriage way, the construction of which many years ago may have caused the formation of the small pool with the frogs. I've heard on Youtube that the frogs should loose their wariness when spawning is in full swing. Maybe the low temperatures (below 10°C) that we have since Mach 18 have precluded that until now.
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I can't help, to me these snouts are short and rounded (rather than tapered). So, R. temporaria. Also the calls are different from those of R. arvensis in that there are no singular calls but just a continuous growling. Despite the large number of frogs, the sound is so low that you must be close to the pool (within 10 m) to hear it. At first I took it for the sound of the wind in the high trees. The last pic shows frog spawn in a (last year) newly excavated hole on the other side of the carriage way, the construction of which many years ago may have caused the formation of the small pool with the frogs. I've heard on Youtube that the frogs should loose their wariness when spawning is in full swing. Maybe the low temperatures (below 10°C) that we have since Mach 18 have precluded that until now.