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.
Wide Bay has or used to have 36 threatened animals within its boundaries. One of them is me, the Fleay's 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.
Fleay's Frog
Mixophyes fleayi
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
Mixophyes fleayi is found across 15 electorates.
Fleay's Frog is a large fossorial frog growing to 90 mm with a steeply sloped, blunt snout. The dorsal surface is light to dark brown with indistinct darker marbling. A dark brown Y-shaped vertebral band with irregular edges starts between the eyes and extends to the vent, sometimes breaking up into a series of blotches along the mid-line. The sides are grey-brown, fading to yellow posteriorly and overlaid by a series of black spots. There is an irregular dark band running from the nostrils through the eye to a point behind the tympanum. There is a dark purple patch beneath the eye. The upper lip is usually mottled brown. The ventral surfaces of the body and limbs are typically yellow, the throat and underside of the thighs may be speckled with brown. The vocal sac is present in males. The soles and palms are black. The thighs are grey-brown, with 7 to 8 narrow, black cross-bands¹
Explore more about this species on the Atlas of Living Australia
Adverse fire regimes
Habitat loss, fragmentation and degradation
Invasive species and diseases
Explore more about the threats facing species on our Resources page.
- Acacia attenuata (Acacia attenuata)
- Acacia grandifolia (Acacia grandifolia)
- Scented Acronychia (Acronychia littoralis)
- Emu Mountain Sheoak (Allocasuarina emuina)
- Allocasuarina thalassoscopica (Allocasuarina thalassoscopica)
- Bacon Wood (Archidendron lovelliae)
- Hairy-joint Grass (Arthraxon hispidus)
- Marbled Balogia (Baloghia marmorata)
- Key's Boronia (Boronia keysii)
- Three-leaved Bosistoa (Bosistoa transversa)
- Ooline (Cadellia pentastylis)
- Coopernookia scabridiuscula (Coopernookia scabridiuscula)
- Cossinia (Cossinia australiana)
- Stinking Cryptocarya (Cryptocarya foetida)
- Leafless Tongue-orchid (Cryptostylis hunteriana)
- Wedge-leaf Tuckeroo (Cupaniopsis shirleyana)
- Cycas megacarpa (Cycas megacarpa)
- Daviesia discolor (Daviesia discolor)
- Small-leaved Denhamia (Denhamia parvifolia)
- Bluegrass (Dichanthium setosum)
- Swamp Stringybark (Eucalyptus conglomerata)
- Ball Nut (Floydia praealta)
- Fontainea rostrata (Fontainea rostrata)
- Fontainea venosa (Fontainea venosa)
- Macadamia Nut (Macadamia integrifolia)
- Small-fruited Queensland Nut (Macadamia ternifolia)
- Rough-shelled Bush Nut (Macadamia tetraphylla)
- Macrozamia parcifolia (Macrozamia parcifolia)
- Pineapple Zamia (Macrozamia pauli-guilielmi)
- Lesser Swamp-orchid (Phaius australis)
- Mt Berryman Phebalium (Phebalium distans)
- Nightcap Plectranthus (Plectranthus nitidus)
- Plectranthus omissus (Plectranthus omissus)
- Plectranthus torrenticola (Plectranthus torrenticola)
- Wallum Leek-orchid (Prasophyllum wallum)
- Prostanthera spathulata (Prostanthera spathulata)
- Austral Cornflower (Rhaponticum australe)
- Scrub Turpentine (Rhodamnia rubescens)
- Native Guava (Rhodomyrtus psidioides)
- Romnalda strobilacea (Romnalda strobilacea)
- Quassia (Samadera bidwillii)
- Blotched Sarcochilus (Sarcochilus weinthalii)
- Austral Toadflax (Thesium australe)
- Glossy Spice Bush (Triunia robusta)
- Penda (Xanthostemon oppositifolius)
You are in federal electorate Wide Bay.