Well technically they are not all endangered. There where 17 species of coquí frogs and three species went extinct leaving 14 species left. Four new species have been identified recently as endangered. The three species that went extinct are the golden coquí, the eneida's coquí and the palmed coquí.
Guys, if you don’t know what she means by saying there are coquis in Florida, yes there is a coqui specie in Florida. It’s just they don’t make the Coqui sound
me gusta el ruidito que hacen, me recuerda a mi infancia cuando los escuchaba en el campo yendo sobre la ruta con mis padres, o en lugares alejados de la ciudad por las noches, el coqui y los grillos son los sonidos iconicos del verano para mi, ahora los oigo en youtube para dormir
Excellent video. But coqui rarely eats lizards or other frogs. Normally are insectivorous. there are 17 coqui species endemic from PR. Only one species has emigrate accidentally on some bromelian plant to other places but the other 16 species are just found in PR. Maybe that's the problems. The variations of the sound of 5 or 6 species on the night make it more melodious. And only one to close could be a bit difficult to handle if you wheren't born on Puerto Rico. In Chile are another similar frog named "Guavaritos". And sound similar and Chilean love them.
I always find them in my bathroom and I let them live there and if they had offspring then I won't take a bath I will not tale one and instead let the live there
Sorry my friend..i think you are Ron...the real story is that somewar in the 60's or 70's. They were experimenting whit some tropical plants some were in El Yunque rein forest. Some of them ( orquídeas ) were send to the island of Hawaii in them they were some Coquí eggs that they didn't inspect ... when they were planted in the forest of Hawaii. The baby Coquís think they were home in Puerto Rico. So they multiple and invaded the forest of Hawaii. Today the people of Hawaii are not use to the loud Coquí noises at night and that's way they are consider a pest for them ( one Note. In the 40's some Puerto Rican went to work in Hawaii there family's and descendants still live there for them the coquí is a simbol of there home land )...the coquí is a nacional simbol for Puerto Rican's is the only real boricua ( other name for Puerto Ricans ) left in the island that represents the Taino indian that live in Puerto Rico when cristofer colombus arrived in 1493. Símbolos of coquí are found all over the island on rocks and cave's were the Tainos live. So i don't know were your get the idea that the coquí is from Hawaii. And yes they were introduce by mistake to Hawaii. But they are not native from the island...they are 💯 boricua and taino from Puerto Rico
They just be all over vibin
When I was a kid I remember one landed on my head and I just let it vibe there
Pest? Maybe for some that are not used to them, but after awhile, they are just a lullaby song for anyone to sleep.
The coqui perfectly represents the puerto rican, small, loud as hell, aggressive, and willing to fight despite its small stature
I love them
...Fuuudge, I can't deny that.
I'm here in PR in February, and they are in full concert
Well technically they are not all endangered. There where 17 species of coquí frogs and three species went extinct leaving 14 species left. Four new species have been identified recently as endangered. The three species that went extinct are the golden coquí, the eneida's coquí and the palmed coquí.
They’re only a pest because of their sound
The sound is soothing to me
That's what I was about to write, they eat pest like mosquitoes and worms, their sound is like a nap song to all puerto Ricans
It’s not the sound, I guess they eat so many insects that it hurts bird populations, as food is more scarce.
The sound of the coqui is like crickets or cicada's here on Long Island. Just natural sounds.
Thanks for the facts. Hermoso sonido qur hacen esos bichillos...
I loved this video! Thank you so much, subscribed!
Such nice info!!
Love froggies!😊
This video is amazing, but the best part is the little plush coqui. Where can I get one?
I got it at a gift shop at an airport in Puerto Rico back in 2007!
@@MiniMindfulMuse cool!! Thanks for replying to my silly question! I feel honored.
@@MiniMindfulMuse wow! That's old, congrats.
Thankyou for sharing very cool..👍
That moment when you're looking for videos for el coquí and you bump into someone you used to work with... Hey Natasha!
Hi Jen!!
I love to hear Coqui singing i fall asleep happy knowing that i live where i have always wanted to live
Great job! What a lovely video.
Guys, if you don’t know what she means by saying there are coquis in Florida, yes there is a coqui specie in Florida. It’s just they don’t make the Coqui sound
I can’t believe people hate them. I found this video bc I wanted to hear the sound to meditate
I ADORE THE COQUí!!!! // YO ADORO EL COQUI!!!! Su nombre cientifico se pronuncia // his scientific name is pronounce: ELEU-TERO-DAC-TILUS
me gusta el ruidito que hacen, me recuerda a mi infancia cuando los escuchaba en el campo yendo sobre la ruta con mis padres, o en lugares alejados de la ciudad por las noches, el coqui y los grillos son los sonidos iconicos del verano para mi, ahora los oigo en youtube para dormir
Excellent!
Thank you!
They are so cute
I'm definitely gonna rock with you as you build your subscribers (:
I think they are native to the virgin islands as well
We can not let el coqui get extinct, they are important animal.
I didn't know any frogs had webbed feet?... But that may just be because I keep wtf haha
Great video!!
Excellent video. But coqui rarely eats lizards or other frogs. Normally are insectivorous. there are 17 coqui species endemic from PR. Only one species has emigrate accidentally on some bromelian plant to other places but the other 16 species are just found in PR. Maybe that's the problems. The variations of the sound of 5 or 6 species on the night make it more melodious. And only one to close could be a bit difficult to handle if you wheren't born on Puerto Rico. In Chile are another similar frog named "Guavaritos". And sound similar and Chilean love them.
I FOUND ONE IN MY SINK TOO
i am phrog
1:51 not annoying
Can we eat coqui frogs?
thank you you help me with a proget
Coqui can not live outside of the Island of Puerto Rico and as of Feb. 2021, 4 of the species of coquis have been determined as endangered species
They live in Hawaii now too.
I always find them in my bathroom and I let them live there and if they had offspring then I won't take a bath I will not tale one and instead let the live there
I would just put it back to their habitat. I’ve found coquíes in my bathroom as well, I just help them find their way back to nature.
No no no.. coqui sings all year long
me with a coqui in my hand
In reality Qoquis are originally from Hawaii, they were taken to PR from there.
Sorry my friend..i think you are Ron...the real story is that somewar in the 60's or 70's. They were experimenting whit some tropical plants some were in El Yunque rein forest. Some of them ( orquídeas ) were send to the island of Hawaii in them they were some Coquí eggs that they didn't inspect ... when they were planted in the forest of Hawaii. The baby Coquís think they were home in Puerto Rico. So they multiple and invaded the forest of Hawaii. Today the people of Hawaii are not use to the loud Coquí noises at night and that's way they are consider a pest for them ( one Note. In the 40's some Puerto Rican went to work in Hawaii there family's and descendants still live there for them the coquí is a simbol of there home land )...the coquí is a nacional simbol for Puerto Rican's is the only real boricua ( other name for Puerto Ricans ) left in the island that represents the Taino indian that live in Puerto Rico when cristofer colombus arrived in 1493. Símbolos of coquí are found all over the island on rocks and cave's were the Tainos live. So i don't know were your get the idea that the coquí is from Hawaii. And yes they were introduce by mistake to Hawaii. But they are not native from the island...they are 💯 boricua and taino from Puerto Rico
@@yankee7664 hummm… that completely make sense… I probably need to do mire research… thanks for that.
They are an invasive and noisy species in Hawaii.