Bullfrogs spend most of their life in the water. This is where they hibernate, breed, and hunt. During the winter months they are in hibernation. Bullfrogs can change color to fit their environment.
Northern Illinois: In mid May, 2009 I found a smooth bright green frog in our holly bush. It matched the leaf color of the bush perfectly. My 12 year old son made a habitat for it and we kept it for about a week. After a couple of days, I looked in and could not find him anywhere. Searching carefully, I discovered he had changed into a common garden toad with dark brown skin and a "warty" complexion and was now down on some bark we had placed on the bottom of his tank. I assumed he had grown up, but still found the transition pretty amazing. However, the next time I checked in on him he was back up on his branch and was smooth and green again! This is the first time I have been aware that frogs/toads change color in order to blend in withtheir environment. I took several pictures, but unfortunately the only good ones I got were in his transition stage…a mottled green. He wasn't eating the crickets we bought for him so we let him go, but now I wish we had studied him a little longer.
Really every frog can change color bot the pacific tree frog and the Peron's tree frog but like i said all frogs can change! :)
frogs change colour because they can change colour
no they can't
nooo
yes
It should ask "Is there" not their. Honestly.
yes they can and they can also fly and eat small frogs
Unfortunately, you cannot change the color of the eraser tool. If you want to avoid the checkerboard pattern, I suggest using the brush tool set to match the background color and paint over the line you wish to get rid of.
An octopus can change colors into whatever it feels like being.
Myth: Chameleons change color to match their environment. Chameleons don't change color to match their environment. Rather, they change color as a response to mood, temperature, health, communication, and light.
It only takes a chameleon a few milliseconds to change color. Despite popular belief, chameleons don't necessarily change color to match their background. In fact, chameleons change color to maintain a favorable body temperature since their bodies can't generate it's own body heat.
We had one in the bathroom that changed it's color to match the mirror frame. The frame is black with gold specks. Then it flew onto the wall and again changed to match the wall's color (beige). I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes!
Yes
Not really. While there are reptiles that can change color, none of them live in the ocean.
camouflage yes because if you cant camouflage your self like a lizard can then you will probably get ate or killed by the predator or person or animal that likes to eat that animal.
Yes. Chameleons are polychromatic because they can change color to match the trees, leaves, and ground around them.