Plasma corticosterone levels were measured in the plasma of the edible frog, Rana esculenta, by a competitive protein-binding radioassay method using baboon plasma as CBG source. 2. This technique was sensitive enough to make the assessment of corticosterone levels in 50 microliter plasma samples possible. The assay sensitivity threshold reached 0.5 ng per tube and the corticosterone rate assessment was correct between 0 and 5 ng. The specificity was tested, using 12 different steroids (fig. 2) : baboon CBG had very slight avidity for aldosterone, the second circulating steroid in frog plasma. 3. Using this technique, we have shown that plasma corticosterone underwent seasonal variations. Plasma corticosterone levels, in animals captured in nature during February and June, were 1.51 +/- 0.06 microgram/100 ml (n = 60) and 2.76 +/- 0.14 microgram/100 ml (n = 36), respectively, as appeared in table III. 4. It appeared that the interrenal gland of the frog was not totally dependent on pituitary ACTH, since total hypophysectomy reduced, but did not suppress, corticosterone secretion (table III).