Amazing things happen in nature as spring begins. The weather changes, plants and trees begin to flourish, and animals start to emerge from their hiding places. According to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife ...
Spring peepers are tiny brown frogs that are currently creating a loud chorus in south-central Indiana wetlands. Beanblossom Bottoms Nature Preserve is a prime location to listen to the frog chorus ...
Hosted on MSN
Nature’s early risers: Spring peepers return
Heralding the season’s arrival with a high-pitched chorus, spring peepers are a sure sign that winter is loosening its grip. Despite their diminutive size — often only about 1 inch — these tree frogs ...
A Northern Spring Peeper crawling over a bed of moss. iSTOCK/COX A Northern Spring Peeper crawling over a bed of moss. iSTOCK/COX I’ve heard, or more accurately, read, that you can hear a lion’s roar ...
The Spring Peeper frog song is loud and one of the best places to hear it is at Beanblossom Bottoms Nature Preserve Watch Next Spencer, Indiana suffers flooding from the White River on Sunday April 6 ...
Mar 23, 2026 Mar 23, 2026 Updated Mar 26, 2026 Over the past week, hundreds of thousands of frogs stirred from hibernation and started traveling in large groups at night. It wasn’t part of a Biblical ...
Hosted on MSN
Minnesota's annual frog and toad survey is ribbeting
If it quacks like a duck, it’s a wood frog. If it sounds like sleigh bells jingling, it’s a spring peeper. If it sounds like someone shaking ball bearings in a tin can, that’s a rare Blanchard’s ...
The northern leopard frog is often discussed as the earliest frog sound you’ll hear when the temperatures begin to rise. The more frog calls you hear, the better the ecosystem. Many frog calls begin ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results