Well mainly the Poison Dart frogs. There could also be others but this is the only one I am sure of, usually the easiest way to tell if a creature such as this is poisonous is to look at it's coloring. The brighter and more vibrant the pigmentation the more likely it is poisonous... or colored to make you think it is. And yes, poison dart frogs do live in trees.
I would go to goggle images and type in tree frogs. You will find many pictures of tree frogs there.
the type of tree frogs that croak at night is i dont know
They have mating calls and distress calls.
tree frogs
It depends on the type.
No type of frog is in the trees all the time, but tree frogs spend a lot of time in the trees.
no, not tree frogs, but some other frogs can be like that
If you are a beginner frog keeper, you need a friendly, easy-to-take-care-of frog. Green tree frogs, White's tree frogs, and African Dwarf frogs are some that are good starter frogs. Beginners should NEVER get Pacman frogs, bullfrogs, Pixie frogs, or Red-eyed tree frogs. You should only get these frogs if you are an experienced frog keeper. Pacman frogs bite and snap and growl, bullfrogs are huge and vicious, and can give you a nasty bite (so can Pacman frogs!), Pixie frogs are big and also vicious, and Red-eyed tree frogs are VERY VERY VERY fragile and break joints easily. So again, Green tree frogs, White's tree frogs, and African Dwarf frogs are the way to go!
tree frogs live in Central America
No. Tree frogs eat insects. All frogs are carnivorous.
Tree frogs depend on fly 's , moths or smaller frogs.
tree frogs do It depends what type of forest you mean. If you mean Rain Forest, yes. There are poisonous ones there and tree frogs also. Even in a regular forest there are bull frogs, regular frogs and toads. Hope this helps.