Hyla - Species

Species

Binomial name Common name
Hyla andersonii Baird, 1854 Pine Barrens Tree Frog
Hyla annectans (Jerdon, 1870) Jerdon's Tree Frog
Hyla arborea (Linnaeus, 1758) European Tree Frog
Hyla arboricola Taylor, 1941
Hyla arenicolor Cope, 1866 Canyon Tree Frog
Hyla avivoca Viosca, 1928 Bird-voiced Tree Frog
Hyla bocourti Mocquard, 1899 Bocourt's Tree Frog
Hyla chinensis Günther, 1858 Common Chinese Tree Frog
Hyla chrysoscelis Cope, 1880 Cope's Gray Tree Frog
Hyla cinerea (Schneider, 1799) American Green Tree Frog
Hyla ebraccata (Cope, 1874) Hourglass Tree Frog
Hyla euphorbiacea Günther, 1858 Southern Highland Tree Frog
Hyla eximia Baird, 1854 Mountain Tree Frog
Hyla femoralis Bosc in Daudin, 1800 Pine Woods Tree Frog
Hyla graceae Myers & Duellman, 1982
Hyla gratiosa LeConte, 1856 Barking Tree Frog
Hyla hallowellii Thompson, 1912 Hallowell's Tree Frog
Hyla heinzsteinitzi Grach, Plesser, and Werner, 2007 Mamilla Pool Tree Frog
Hyla immaculata Boettger, 1888 Spotless Tree Toad
Hyla intermedia Boulenger, 1882 Italian Tree Frog
Hyla japonica Günther, 1859 Japanese Tree Frog
Hyla meridionalis Boettger, 1874 Mediterranean Tree Frog
Hyla plicata Brocchi, 1877 Ridged Tree Frog
Hyla sanchiangensis Pope, 1929 San Chiang Tree Frog
Hyla sarda (De Betta, 1853) Sardinian Tree Frog
Hyla savignyi Audouin, 1827 Middle East Tree Frog
Hyla simplex Boettger, 1901 Annam Tree Frog
Hyla squirella Bosc in Daudin, 1800 Squirrel Tree Frog
Hyla stepheni Boulenger, 1888 Northeast China Tree Toad
Hyla suweonensis Kuramoto, 1980 Suweon Tree Frog
Hyla tsinlingensis Liu and Hu in Hu, Zhao, and Liu, 1966 Shensi Tree Frog
Hyla versicolor LeConte, 1825 Gray Tree Frog
Hyla walkeri Stuart, 1954 Walker's Tree Frog
Hyla wrightorum Taylor, 1939 Wright’s Mountain Tree Frog
Hyla zhaopingensis Tang and Zhang, 1984

Read more about this topic:  Hyla

Famous quotes containing the word species:

    Our species successfully raised children for tens of thousands of years before the first person wrote down the word “psychology.” The fundamental skills needed to be a parent are within us. All we’re really doing is fine-tuning a process that’s already remarkably successful.
    Lawrence Kutner (20th century)

    Thus all probable reasoning is nothing but a species of sensation. ‘Tis not solely in poetry and music, we must follow our taste and sentiment, but likewise in philosophy, When I am convinc’d of any principle, ‘tis only an idea which strikes more strongly upon me. When I give the preference to one set of arguments above another, I do nothing but decide from my feeling concerning the superiority of their influence.
    David Hume (1711–1776)

    The further our civilization advances upon its present lines so much the cheaper sort of thing does “fame” become, especially of the literary sort. This species of “fame” a waggish acquaintance says can be manufactured to order, and sometimes is so manufactured.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)