Hyla ocularis Latreille In Sonnini de Manoncourt and Latreille, 1801
Hyla oculata Daudin, 1802
Calamita ocularis Merrem, 1820
Rana gryllus LeConte, 1825
Rana dorsalis Harlan, 1827
Auletris ocularis Wagler, 1830
Hylodes gryllus Holbrook, 1838
Acris gryllus Duméril and Bibron, 1841
Acris acheta Baird, 1854
Acris gryllus gryllus Cope, 1875
Acris gryllus var. bufonia Boulenger, 1882
Acris gryllus achetae Garman, 1884
Acris gryllus dorsalis Netting and Goin, 1945,
The southern cricket frog, savannah cricket frog, savannah cricket, cricket frog, Florida cricket frog, southeastern cricket frog, or coastal plain cricket frog (Acris gryllus) is a frog. It lives in the southeastern United States in Louisiana, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia, Mississippi, and Florida.[2][3][1]
This frog is small. It is about 1.6-3.2 mm long from nose to rear end. It has a dark triangle mark between its eyes. There is a light stripe from the eye to the front leg.[3]
This frog lives in lowlands and in river valleys. People have seen it near ponds, bogs, and areas with rivers. Because this frog cannot climb very well, it moves away from danger by hopping or going into the water. It can jump 2 feet (60 cm) up in the air and 3-4 feet (90-120 cm) across.[3]
There are at least two subspecies of this frog: Acris gryllus gryllus and Acris gryllus dorsalis. A. g. gryllus has two dark stripes with light color around them on each hind leg. It has warts near its rear end. A. g. dorsalis has two dark lines on each hind leg and no warts.[3]