Note: Most of these are very large images, so that you can see all the detail in the photo. I have cropped many of these pictures to help reduce the size of the image, but have not resized anything. Most of these pictures are in a ratio of size suitable for desktop backgrounds. (4:3 ratio)
Click a thumbnail to see the full-size image. If you want the full-size image to open in a new window, hold down the shift key when you click on a picture.
Western Chorus frogs are very tiny, and are hard to locate in ponds and even harder to sneak up on. They can be striped like this one or sometimes the lines are broken up and they look more like spots.
Right in the center of this is a head on view of a singing Western Chorus frog.
A frog rests on a log.
I was using my zoom to get this frog singing, so you can see the inflated vocal sac. Unlike wood frogs, they sing sitting on reeds above the water and have only one vocal sac. It was not until I was cropping and compressing these images for the website that I noticed I actually got another Western Chorus Frog in this picture. The other one is just to the right of the singing one, and is mostly in the water except for the head.