Some basic parameters of the life history of Alsodes montanus and Alsodes tumultuosus (Anura-Leptodactylidae), were studied from 1977 to 1980 by periodic field observations at Farellones and La Parva (33-34° south lat.; 2,700-3,000 m above sea level). Special attention was paid to strategies of resource partitioning in relation to gross features of the environment. The latter was unstable with a relative short period favorable for activity of the animals. Physical environmental differences between the first and second season of this study, resulted in a decrease in total number of active adults, a reduction in the duration of larval activity and a shift in microhabitat preferences of larvae. During the favorable season, October to May, adults of both species showed spatial and temporal segregation, related to different physical features of the environment; larvae did not show temporal segregation. Larvae of both species were found in seven different microhabitats; only in one of these