Gliding Frogs
Gliding frogs spend their day in trees and large bushes holding on by the disks on their toes. In very bright sunlight, they are greenish-blue, but they turn green in the evening and then finally turn black. This change takes place more rapidly in males than in females. The gliding frogs become active during the night, leaping from branch to branch, taking huge leaps from tree to tree. The leaps that they take may be up to six feet, but the glide may cover ten to fifty feet to the base of the next tree.
The gliding frogs mainly eat grasshoppers but they will also eat other insects as well.
When they are breeding, they do not go in the water but make foamy nests on large leaves. The eggs float in this next until rain washes them away or the tadpoles fall out of the nest into the pools of water below.