Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚥馃嚬 Malta

Maltese painted frog - found nowhere else on Earth

A tiny frog that only lives on the Maltese islands

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Maltese painted frog is a small brown-and-yellow frog with dark spots - a little like a tiny living painting. It is special because it lives only on the Maltese islands and nowhere else in the world. Scientists call this 'endemic', which means: this is its one and only home.

Tell me more

The frog is small - only about 7 centimetres long, roughly the length of your thumb. It lives near fresh water: in streams that flow down hillsides after rain, in stone water tanks in the countryside, and in the damp shady corners of valleys.

Malta does not have many streams, because it is a hot, dry country. So the painted frog is very precious - there are not many places it can live. Conservation groups carefully look after the ponds and tanks where it breeds, to make sure the population stays healthy.

Painted frogs are very shy. If you walk too noisily near a pond, they vanish - 'plop!' into the water - before you've even seen them. The way to spot one is to sit quietly for a few minutes near the edge of a pond at dusk. Slowly, their little heads start to pop back up.

The frog's 'painted' look is good camouflage. The yellow patches help it disappear among yellow autumn leaves, and the brown spots match the rocks and mud. Frogs all over the world use tricks like this. Most are very, very good at being hard to see.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01An 'endemic' animal lives in just one place in the world. What might happen to it if that place changed a lot?
  2. 02Why might being hard to see be a useful skill for a small animal?
  3. 03If you had to design camouflage for a school playground, what colours and patterns would you use?
Try this

Classroom activity

Each pupil designs camouflage for a paper frog cut-out so that, when it's placed somewhere in the classroom, the next pupil can't spot it for 10 seconds. Test the designs. Which were the best at hiding? Why?