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Since males are too small to grip the female during mating as other frogs do, the male secretes a kind of glue to keep the mating pair together.

:marseyreading: That's a good dating tip, just lock 'em down with glue. Did the YouTube channel link the right species though? Looking at wiki and the University of California's specimen database they usually seem to be darker. I'm not sure if it's leucistic or if that's the Damaraland phenotype. You post frogs a lot, do you happen to know?

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I'll have to check ✔️ and come back lol

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I would like to subscribe to the frog facts with Kaamrev RSS feed. :marseyfrog2:

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i owe you a snake post

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I figured I might have to stop asking for it to ever happen, but I am genuinely curious, yes. I pinged all the :marseytunaktunak: and :marseybrasileiro: to ask them about their snake experiences. Before we ever return to the States I want to go into the rainforests to find some cobras. Fortunately I wear glasses :marseynerd2: because we have two endemic species and one is a spitter. Otherwise there's an island with a rainbow variety of temple vipers, but I doubt I'll convince my wife to make that trip with me. Lots of sea snakes too, we find at least one along the beaches pretty much every day.

There are king cobras as well but they're actually :marseyakshually: not in the Naja genus. More closely related to mambas. And our king cobras are the smallest in Asia so we might have to someday travel over to Indonesia or Malaysia to see some giant ones. :marseyonemediumsnekvibing:

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