to be able to camaflage into leaves and plants to hide form the preditor
It is the same question as; "Why are we white?", "Why are we black?," "Why are we blonde?", "Why are we brown?", "Why are we red?", ect.
The green skin of a tree frog is a type of camouflage. It allows the tree frog to blend into plants, leaves, and grass.
An example of an animal with skin is a green tree frog.
spatulate nosed tree forgs are found in central America in moist areas i think
Apple.
So it can blend in with its environnment. Green tree frogs are not actually green. They just appear green. Frogs have no green pigmentation in their skin at all. Like mammals, they are unable to produce green pigment. Mammals, reptiles and amphibians can only produce black and yellow-red pigment, and all colours and patterns on a frog's skin are the result of different combinations of these two pigments. Frogs contain variations of the yellow-red pigment. Most species of frogs appear green because of the pattern of refraction of blue light by special cells in their skin blending in with this yellow pigment.
No, a chameleon can't change colors. It can go from light green to dark green to brown, but that's changing shade, not color. If you see a chameleon that's green and in a green tree, he hasn't changed green because of the tree. He was born green, but lives in the tree because he is the same color.
It has red eyes, bright green and yellow skin, and orange feet
Tongue
the same weight as a horse
The green tree frog is nocturnal. In the daytime, the green tree frog sleeps on green foliage to camoflauge.
A python that lives in a green tree