Tiger frog.
Rana tigris often lives in paddy fields, ditches, ponds, reservoirs, swamps and other places with water below 9 meters above sea level, and its habitat changes with different life stages such as foraging, breeding and wintering.
During the breeding season, it mainly moves in still water and shallow water areas such as rice fields. When young frogs mostly live in caves such as ridges and crevices made of stones, they just stick their heads out of the holes, and if they have food activities, they quickly prey on them. If they are harmed by the enemy, they hide in the caves. In the hours after dusk, the tiger frog moves most frequently, especially in the evening, which makes them extremely excited.
Rana tigris distribution:
It is native to Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Viet Nam. In China, it is mainly distributed in the south of the Yangtze River and reaches Yancheng, Jiangsu Province in the north. Including Henan (Gushi, Shangcheng, Tongbai, Luoshan, Dabie Mountain in Xinxian County), Shaanxi (Langao Daba Mountain), Anhui (Susong, Xuancheng, Qingyang, Ningguo, Jiuhuashan and all places south of Huaihe River) and Jiangsu (Yancheng, Nanjing, Suzhou, Liyang and Jiangdu);
Shanghai, Zhejiang (Wenzhou, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Longquan, Jinyun, Tiantai, Jinhua, Zhenhai, Lin' an, Yuhang, Fenghua, Wenling, Dongtou Island), Jiangxi (Jiujiang, Pingxiang, Guangfeng, Lead Mountain, Jiulianshan in the south), Hunan (Changsha, Hengshan, Yizhang, Zhejiang).
Yanling, Jiangyong, Pingjiang, Xintian), Fujian (Yongtai, Zhaoan, Xiamen, Nanjing, Putian, Fuzhou, Nanping, Shunchang, Shaowu, Wuyishan, Changting, Shaxian, Fuding, Zhangzhou), Sichuan, Yunnan, Guizhou, Hubei, Taiwan Province, Macau, Guangdong, Hainan. Introduced from Malaysia and Philippines.