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Distribution and Habitat

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Widely dispersed from the Clarke Range in mid-eastern Queensland to the Blue Mountains in New South Wales. The species appears to be stable and has suffered no known decline within its range.The extent of occurrence of the species is approximately 214700 km2
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J.-M. Hero
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H. Hines
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E. Meyer
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D. Newell
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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Prefers coastal or mountain rainforest, often with sandy banks or leaf litter. Appears quite resilient to disturbance, perhaps due to its broad habitat utilisation. However it does not tolerate complete forest clearing.Breeds in late spring and eggs are deposited among leaf litter on the banks of streams and washed into the pools of streams or streamside pools during heavy rain. Has been found breeding in farm dams near forested areas.
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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No known declines and large extent of occurrence.ThreatsClearing of forest.Conservation MeasuresNone in place for species, but it is protected where it occurs in National Parks, e.g. Lamington National Park.
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J.-M. Hero
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Great barred frog

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The great barred frog (Mixophyes fasciolatus) is an Australian ground-dwelling frog of the genus Mixophyes.

Description

Mixophyes fasciolatus.JPG

The great barred frog reaches a size of 8 centimetres and has large, powerful legs. It has a dark brown dorsal surface and a white ventral surface. The thighs are yellow blotched with black and it has parallel black bars along the legs. A dark line begins at the snout, passes through the eye and over the tympanum, and bends down behind the tympanum. Its feet are fully webbed and hands completely un-webbed. Its eyes are on top of the head and the tympanum is visible.

The tadpoles are quite large, reaching 8.5 centimetres long, and are grey-brown or gold-brown in colour.[2]

Ecology and behaviour

The great barred frog is a ground-dwelling frog which inhabits rainforests, Antarctic beech forests, or wet sclerophyll forests. This frog breeds in both streams and ponds, and it calls from the surrounding land. All the other frogs of the genus Mixophyes breed only in streams. The mating call is a very loud "wark-wark-wark" which is occasionally followed by a softer, slow trill "bwaaark-bwaaark".

The male and female great barred frog will enter the water for amplexus. After laying the eggs, the female will flick them onto the bank for development. The eggs will then be washed into the stream or pond after the first rain and hatch into tadpoles. The tadpoles take around 12 months to develop into frogs.[2]

The great barred frog is almost always found near running water. Its powerful legs, and webbed feet allow it to escape predation by hopping large distances into water and quickly swimming away.

As a pet

In Australia this animal can be kept in captivity with the appropriate permit.[3]

References

  1. ^ Harry Hines, Jean-Marc Hero, Ed Meyer, John Clarke, David Newell (2004). "Mixophyes fasciolatus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004: e.T13596A4220916. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T13596A4220916.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b "Great Barred Frog". Australian Museum. Australian Museum. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  3. ^ Mark Davidson. 2005. Australian Reptile Keeper Publications. ISBN 0-9758200-0-1
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Great barred frog: Brief Summary

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The great barred frog (Mixophyes fasciolatus) is an Australian ground-dwelling frog of the genus Mixophyes.

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