The Australian Museum’s FrogID project has now officially logged 1.3 million frog records - submitted by terns of thousands of citizens.
The frog recording submission that reached the milestone was a Green Tree Frog, recorded by Karen Gardner from Atherton, Queensland.
And the Museum is pleased: more than 47,000 Australians have recorded frogs in their ponds, pools, streams and wetlands and submitted their FrogID recordings from across 39% of continental Australia.
The Museum says keen frog lovers have helped build an unparalleled database of frog biodiversity — a vital resource for conservation, research, and understanding our environment.
Everyone who submits a recording eventually receives a report from the Frog ID experts at the Museum, identifying the frog species they recorded. Given the numbers, there is a backlog but the Museum says it is getting smaller each week.
If you want to know what frog calls you are enjoying in and around your home or property - and are happy to contribute to the database - just download the Frog ID app onto your phone and follow the instructions.