Aussie researchers discover ‘parachuting frog’

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Littoria pterodactyla or the parachuting frog is a big green frog with lots of webbing on its toes. Photo credits: Stephen Richards

SYDNEY: A team of Australian researchers have discovered a new species of parachuting frog, hidden away in the remote jungles of Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, Xinhua News Agency reported.

The group of scientists from Griffith University and Queensland state museum, also came across two other previously unknown frog species during their expedition around Papua New Guinea and Indonesia.

There has an incredible diversity of frogs and a lot of those species have only been described for the last 10-20 years, senior curator at Queensland Museum Paul Oliver told Xinhua on Friday.

“The more you go back, the more you get to new areas, the more you find new species.”

Officially named Litoria pinocchio and Litoria vivissimia, the other two look similar to regular tree frogs, however the previously unknown creatures have a small spike protruding from the tips of their snouts.

Littoria pterodactyla or the parachuting frog is a big green frog with lots of webbing on its toes. Photo credits: Stephen Richards

The third newly found frog called Litoria pterodactyla or the parachuting frog, has an entirely different distinction.

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“It’s a big green frog with lots of webbing on its toes,” Oliver explained.

“They live high in the forest canopy and if they want to move, they will just jump into the air and they spread their fingers and toes, and then they can control their decent down.”

While this is the first recorded sightings of the three species, Oliver said, that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re rare.

“There’s lots of forest where they occur and, in the areas, where they live there’s not many people, so there’s not a reason to feel like they’re going to lose their forest home in the future, so we would guess that their population is secure.”

“But the honest answer is for each of the three frogs, we’ve seen them only once. So, we just don’t know.” – Bernama

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