Elected representatives in government are in charge of the policy and funding that can make or break saving threatened species. Their decisions and actions matter.
Calare has or used to have 37 threatened animals within its boundaries. One of them is me, the Booroolong Frog.
We took care to attach appropriate images that are as close to representative of each species as our resources and the availability of images allowed. However, we could not ensure perfect accuracy in every case. Some images show species that share the same genus but not at the species or subspecies level.
Booroolong Frog
Litoria booroolongensis
Status: Endangered
The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act) lists threatened species under six categories:
Extinct, Extinct in the wild, Critically Endangered, Endangered, Vulnerable, Conservation dependent. Read more about these categories
Litoria booroolongensis is found across 13 electorates.
The Booroolong Frog is a medium sized tree frog. Adults grow to about 40 mm to 55 mm. Their body colour may be dull grey, olive or reddish brown, and may be uniform or consist of indistinct black markings and salmon-coloured flecks. The abdomen is white. The backs of the thighs are dark brown, with a few small pale spots. The dorsum usually has a slightly warty appearance, while the ventral surface is pale and finely granular. The throat is smooth and white in females and dark in males. A faint, thin, black strip begins at the snout and passes through the eye, curving slightly over the small tympanum to the shoulder. The back of the thighs may be dark brown or covered in a yellow and black reticulated pattern. The fingers and toes have well developed discs, but of moderate size, and the toes are strongly, nearly fully webbed while the fingers are web-free. Webbing extends to the base of all discs except the second toe. The vomerine teeth extend from between to behind the choanae, and there are also small maxillary teeth.¹
Explore more about this species on the Atlas of Living Australia
Changed surface and groundwater regimes
Climate change and severe weather
Habitat loss, fragmentation and degradation
Invasive species and diseases
Explore more about the threats facing species on our Resources page.
- Bynoe's Wattle (Acacia bynoeana)
- Flockton Wattle (Acacia flocktoniae)
- Acacia meiantha (Acacia meiantha)
- Acrophyllum australe (Acrophyllum australe)
- Yass Daisy (Ammobium craspedioides)
- Androcalva procumbens (Androcalva procumbens)
- Sandy Hollow Commersonia (Androcalva rosea)
- Thick-leaf Star-hair (Astrotricha crassifolia)
- Austrostipa wakoolica (Austrostipa wakoolica)
- a shrub (Baeckea kandos)
- Dense Cord-rush (Baloskion longipes)
- Deane's Boronia (Boronia deanei)
- Bossiaea fragrans (Bossiaea fragrans)
- Duramana Fingers (Caladenia attenuata)
- Leafless Tongue-orchid (Cryptostylis hunteriana)
- White-flowered Wax Plant (Cynanchum elegans)
- Bluegrass (Dichanthium setosum)
- Buttercup Doubletail (Diuris aequalis)
- Black Gum (Eucalyptus aggregata)
- a stringybark (Eucalyptus alligatrix subsp. miscella)
- Silver-leaf Candlebark (Eucalyptus canobolensis)
- Camden Woollybutt (Eucalyptus macarthurii)
- Silver-leaved Mountain Gum (Eucalyptus pulverulenta)
- Robertson's Peppermint (Eucalyptus robertsonii subsp. hemisphaerica)
- Grevillea evansiana (Grevillea evansiana)
- Grey Grevillea (Grevillea obtusiflora)
- a shrub (Hakea dohertyi)
- Hal (Haloragodendron lucasii)
- Homoranthus darwinioides (Homoranthus darwinioides)
- Indigofera efoliata (Indigofera efoliata)
- Fletcher's Drumsticks (Isopogon fletcheri)
- Kunzea cambagei (Kunzea cambagei)
- Leionema lachnaeoides (Leionema lachnaeoides)
- Rylstone Bell (Leionema sympetalum)
- Spiny Pepper-cress (Lepidium aschersonii)
- Basalt Pepper-cress (Lepidium hyssopifolium)
- Hoary Sunray (Leucochrysum albicans subsp. tricolor)
- Olearia cordata (Olearia cordata)
- Ozothamnus tesselatus (Ozothamnus tesselatus)
- Needle Geebung (Persoonia acerosa)
- Hairy Geebung (Persoonia hirsuta)
- Clandulla Geebung (Persoonia marginata)
- Persoonia mollis subsp. revoluta (Persoonia mollis subsp. revoluta)
- Rufous Pomaderris (Pomaderris brunnea)
- Cotoneaster Pomaderris (Pomaderris cotoneaster)
- Bent Pomaderris (Pomaderris sericea)
- Tawny Leek-orchid (Prasophyllum fuscum)
- Tarengo Leek Orchid (Prasophyllum petilum)
- a leek-orchid (Prasophyllum sp. Wybong )
- Wollemi Mint-bush (Prostanthera cryptandroides subsp. cryptandroides)
- Prostanthera discolor (Prostanthera discolor)
- Prostanthera gilesii (Prostanthera gilesii)
- Mount Vincent Mintbush (Prostanthera stricta)
- Smooth Bush-pea (Pultenaea glabra)
- Genowlan Point Pultenaea (Pultenaea sp. Genowlan Point )
- Scrub Turpentine (Rhodamnia rubescens)
- Small Purple-pea (Swainsona recta)
- Austral Toadflax (Thesium australe)
- Mountain Trachymene (Trachymene scapigera)
- Tylophora linearis (Tylophora linearis)
- Velleia perfoliata (Velleia perfoliata)
- Wollemi Pine (Wollemia nobilis)
- Swamp Everlasting (Xerochrysum palustre)
- Ingram's Zieria (Zieria ingramii)
- Granite Zieria (Zieria obcordata)
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