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2 answers

First of all it matters what species you are referring to and where it lives. For example I grew up in Washington State and the tree frog there (Rana cascadae) lives in the grass, shrubs, and trees and is known to be found up to 20 feet high in the canopy of trees. (source #1) By the way the Pacific North West (Washington, Oregon, and British Columbia, west of the Cascade Mountains are Temperate Rain-forests)

As you can see from the sources after #1 the height depends on the species and where it lives. Tree frogs range anywhere from the ground dwelling types that mainly stick to the underbrush and trunks of trees to those that spend most of their life in the canopy even laying their eggs in bromeliads as the South American species.

Just find the scientific name of the species you are wondering about and type it into a good search engine or scientific peer reviewed database to find their specific habitats.

Good luck.

2006-10-30 14:31:03 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I wonder if the name is a hint? Probably not. My guess is that it is a tunnelling frog, and lives underground.

2006-10-30 13:57:59 · answer #2 · answered by iansand 7 · 0 1

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