Every croak counts: 'Urgent rescue mission' to save Australia's frogs

By Julie Power
Updated January 9 2018 - 9:43am, first published November 10 2017 - 12:29pm
??????Godzilla?????? the Green tree frog , on a smart phone. The Australian Museum has produced an app which can identify frog species using their calls for the public to help track species in Australia. Pic Nick Moir 8 nov 2017
??????Godzilla?????? the Green tree frog , on a smart phone. The Australian Museum has produced an app which can identify frog species using their calls for the public to help track species in Australia. Pic Nick Moir 8 nov 2017
A smart phone reflected in the eye of a Pobblebonk frog .The Australian Museum has produced an app which can identify frog species using their calls for the public to help track species in Australia. Pic Nick Moir 8 nov 2017
A smart phone reflected in the eye of a Pobblebonk frog .The Australian Museum has produced an app which can identify frog species using their calls for the public to help track species in Australia. Pic Nick Moir 8 nov 2017
??????Godzilla?????? the Green tree frog , on a smart phone. The Australian Museum has produced an app which can identify frog species using their calls for the public to help track species in Australia. Pic Nick Moir 8 nov 2017
??????Godzilla?????? the Green tree frog , on a smart phone. The Australian Museum has produced an app which can identify frog species using their calls for the public to help track species in Australia. Pic Nick Moir 8 nov 2017

Like the stars of stage, screen and Sesame Street, the 25-year-old green tree frog called Godzilla??? was immediately ready for his croak up.