Appearance
Adult males measure 20–22 mm and adult females, based on a single specimen, 22 mm in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is indistinct, but the supratympanic fold is prominent. The fingers have well-developed discs and dermal fringes but no webbing. The toes have discs and rudimentary webbing. Skin of snout bears small horny spines, and there are horny ridges between eyes, arranged in triangle. Dorsal skin is covered with small horny spines. The dorsum is light greyish brown, light brownish grey, or light-reddish brown. Dark or light red markings may be present.Naming
The specific name ''griet'' honours Griet Decock, spouse of Franky Bossuyt fr, the scientist who described the species. Common name Griet bush frog has been coined for it.Habitat
''Raorchestes griet'' has been observed in roadside vegetation near isolated forest patches or in plantations near forests at about 600–1,800 m above sea level. It is nocturnal and arboreal. Males call from ground level up to two metres above the ground.This species can be locally abundant, but it is threatened by habitat fragmentation.
References:
Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.