Southern cricket frog explained
The southern cricket frog or southeastern cricket frog (Acris gryllus) is a small hylid frog native to the Southeastern United States.[1] It is very similar in appearance and habits to the northern cricket frog, Acris crepitans, and was considered formerly conspecific (Dickerson 1906). The scientific name Acris is from the Greek word for locust, and the species name gryllus is Latin for cricket (Georgia Wildlife).
Description
At 0.75–1.5 inches (16–32 mm) in length, Acris gryllus is even smaller than A. crepitans. Other characters that differentiate the southern species are:
- More pointed snout--A. crepitans more blunt.
- Hind leg is more than half length of the body when folded—that of A. crepitans is less than one half body length. When rear leg is extended forward, the heel of A. gryllus usually reaches beyond the snout—does not reach snout in A. crepitans.
- A. gryllus can jump longer distances than A. crepitans.
- A. gryllus has a sharply-defined black stripe on the back of the thigh--A. crepitans has a ragged stripe.
- Webbing on rear feet of A. gryllus is sparse, more extensive in A. crepitans.
There is evidence that the color of the vertebral stripe on southern cricket frogs can vary temporally and can change within one frog's lifetime. [2]
Range and habitat
The southern cricket frog is characteristic of coastal plain bogs, bottomland swamps, ponds, and ditches. It prefers sunny areas, and is usually not found in woodlands. Subspecies Acris gryllus gryllus is found in the Atlantic Coastal Plain from southeastern Virginia through the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, west to the Mississippi River. It is found mostly east of the Fall Line, but extends into more upland areas of the Piedmont along river valleys. Subspecies Acris gryllus dorsalis is found throughout the Florida peninsula.
Habits
The southern cricket frog feeds on insects, spiders, and other arthropods. It is active throughout the year in warm weather.
Reproduction
Breeding is in late spring and summer. The advertisement call of the males is a loud rapid gick, gick, gick. Up to 150 eggs are laid at a time, and more than one mass may be produced in a season (Martof et al. 1980).
Subspecies
- Acris gryllus dorsalis (Harlan, 1827) – Florida cricket frog
- Acris gryllus gryllus (LeConte, 1825) – Coastal plain cricket frog, southern cricket frog
References
- Conant, Roger, et al. (1998). A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. .
- Dickerson, Mary C. (1906). The Frog Book. New York: Doubleday, Page, and Company.
- Georgia Museum of Natural History. Georgia Wildlife—accessed 15 May 2006
- Martof, Bernard S., et al. (1980). Amphibians and Reptiles of the Carolinas and Virginia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. .
- Myers, P., et al. The Animal Diversity Web—accessed 15 May 2006
- United States Department of Agriculture, Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS)—accessed 15 May 2006
- United States Geological Survey (USGS), Southeast Ecological Science Center—accessed 15 May 2006
Notes and References
- Web site: Acris gryllus (LeConte, 1825) . Frost, Darrel R. . 2014 . Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0 . American Museum of Natural History . 21 January 2015.
- Cox . Christian L. . Bowers . Jessica . Obialo . Chinonye . Curlis . John David . Streicher . Jeffrey W. . 2020-09-16 . Spatial and temporal dynamics of exuberant colour polymorphism in the southern cricket frog . Journal of Natural History . 54 . 35-36 . 2249–2264 . 10.1080/00222933.2020.1842536 . 0022-2933.