FAQs About Anurans/Frogs: Fire Belly/Bellied
Toads
Related Articles: Keeping African Clawed Frogs and African
Dwarf Frogs by Neale Monks, Amphibians, Turtles,
Related FAQs: Frogs other Than African & Clawed 2,
FAQs on: General Frog
Identification, General Frog
Behavior, General Frog
Compatibility, General Frog
Selection, General Frog
Systems, General Frog
Feeding, General Frog
Health, General
Frog Reproduction,
FAQs on: Bullfrogs, Leopard Frogs, Surinam Toads/Pipa, Tadpoles of all Sorts, Toads/Terrestrial Frogs, White/Tree Frogs, Amphibians 1, African Dwarf Frogs, African Clawed Frogs, Newts & Salamanders, Rubber Eels/Caecilians, Turtles, Amphibian Identification, Amphibian Behavior, Amphibian Compatibility, Amphibian Selection, Amphibian Systems, Amphibian Feeding, Amphibian Disease, Amphibian Reproduction,
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Fire Belly Toad
2/12/20
Good afternoon.
I have 1 fire belly toad in a 10 gallon aquarium. I have rocks for
his land portion and also a repto-filter that is a large rock for
him to climb on. I have 2 questions.
<Fire away, Rebecca,>
1. Is he okay to be by him self? I have been looking for another one
but cannot find a roommate for him.
<He's absolutely fine on his own.>
2. I have him on my desk at work. I have a water heater in the water
and turn on a UVB bulb during the day. Is it necessary to have the
UVB?
<Traditionally the answer has been "no" for these and indeed most
other pet amphibians. There is, however, recent scientific evidence
showing that providing UV-B improves vitamin D3 formation and
thereby leads to better overall growth and health. The optimal
situation would be to use a combination heat/UV-B lamp over the
basking area, while providing room temperature water. Heaters in the
water (like the ones you'd use with tropical fish) are risky with
amphibians because they sometimes climb on
them, get stuck somehow between the heater and the glass, and then
get burned when the heater turns on. Use a heater guard (a sort of
plastic grille) to prevent that happening. Better yet, a filter that
has a built-in heater.>
Room temperature is around 70-73 degrees during working hours but at
night they turn the thermostat down to 60 so the temperature in my
office can get as low as 50 degrees. Is the water heater the best
option for this?
<No, see above. The commonest species is Bombina orientalis, handles
cool nighttime and winter temperatures just fine, so long as it can
warm up during the day under a heat lamp. So long as the room
doesn't get colder than 10 C (50 F) then room temperature is likely
fine without a water heater. But setting it to, say, 15 C (60 F) as
a 'back stop' can be a good way to make sure the tank never gets too
cold. In the wild the frogs would be jumping between cold water and
sunny basking sites on land, and by
alternating between the two, regulate their body temperature.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fire Belly Toad 2/14/20
Thank you for the info!! I have rearranged his home eliminating the
water heater and put a basking light above the basking area. What
wattage do you recommend?
<Depends largely on the size of the tank. If the heater bulb is
attached to a thermostat (the ideal) then it'll warm up to the right
temperature and no higher. If the bulb is simply used 'as is' and
switched on and off manually, then I'd err on the size of caution.
Do consult with your retailer and/or examine the manufacturers
recommendations for the bulbs available in your country. I'd imagine
something like 25W would be sufficient, since you only need a small
warm patch for basking; what you're not doing is heating the whole
vivarium.>
Do you recommend a basking bulb or maybe just a daytime heating
lamp?
<Ideally, use a combo heat and UV-B lamp for best results. With
sufficient UV-B, vitamin deficiencies are less likely, particularly
if you're offering a range of foods including periodical use of
standard issue mineral supplements for reptiles. With all amphibians
and reptiles, it's a lot cheaper to prevent health problems than to
treat them, not least of all because their slow metabolism means
problems take a long time to become apparent, by which time even
vets can have trouble turning things around.>
Thanks again,
Rebecca
<Most welcome. Neale.>
Firebelly toad troubles
3/16/19
Hello,
I was given a Firebelly toad for my classroom. Yesterday he was fine yet
today his head is being held to the side and swimming in circles. He is
breathing rather fast and irregularly. His water is fine. He was eating
fine but just today he is acting weird.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Judy
<Hello Judy. I'm sympathetic to your plight here, having recently had
some Axolotls given to me by a student moving on, so now I've found
myself looking after them -- and now some tadpoles! -- alongside my
usual classroom animals and plants. Still, I'm going to direct you to
some reading first:
http://www.xenopus.com/disease.htm
While tailored to another species, the basics apply to Fire-bellied
Toads, Bombina spp. I'm also going to state the usual thing that we
can't really offer much help unless you tell us something about the
toad's environment. What do you mean by the "water is fine"? Do you have
a mature biological filter here? What is the water temperature? What
sort of foods are used?
Are there any other animals in the tank? Do you use water conditioner to
neutralise chlorine with each water change? Is there any exposure to
airborne toxins? Bunch of things I need to know before offering anything
more specific to your situation. As is always the case with amphibians
and reptiles, disease is MUCH easier prevented than cured. So ensuring
you understand the basics and can house these toads properly is really
important. Cheers, Neale.>
Eye problem with my fire-bellied toad
12/12/12
Hello!
I have two fire-bellied toads which my husband gave me a few years ago
for a Valentine's Day present. They've been doing fine, but today
while feeding them I noticed an issue with one toad. One of its
eyes is red in color and appears to be bulging out of its eyelid.
I only noticed it today and am not sure how long it's been like that,
but it's pretty noticeable so perhaps it's a recent development.
Do you have any idea what's wrong and what I should do about it?
Thanks!
<"Finrot" type infections on these largely aquatic toads are quite
common.
They're usually caused by physical damage, sometimes from other animals
but also from things like a filter inlet lacking an appropriate screen
to keep the frog or toad out. In any case, treat as per Finrot in fish,
using an appropriate antibacterial medications; I'd go with a
combination of Maracyn and Maracyn 2, dosed as instructed on the
package. Remember to remove carbon from the filter if used. Do also
check water quality is good, i.e., zero ammonia and nitrite; if water
quality sucks, then no amount of medication will help. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Eye problem with my fire-bellied toad
12/12/12
Thanks, Neale. I'll give the Maracyn a try!
--Hollie
<Good luck. The nice thing about using both Maracyn and Maracyn 2 is
that they each target different categories of bacteria, gram-positive
and gram-negative, so you have the best shot of killing off whatever's
causing the problem. If you have a vet used to treating amphibians and
reptiles, they may be able to help (possibly more cheaply if they'd
prescribe just one antibiotic) and that's standard operating practise
here in the UK; in the US, you can get some antibiotics (like Maracyn 1
and 2) in pet shops, so you do have this other way forward. Cheers,
Neale.>
Why is my fire belly toads foot disappearing??? Please help 11/13/12
I inherited someone's fire belly toad and tree frog tank. It's a half
and half tank.
<I see.>
The water is impeccably clean.
<Good.>
The filter alone must have cost a couple hundred dollars. There are 3
tree frogs and 1 Firebelly toad. There are 2, rather large goldfish and
two Danios in about 15 gallons of water.
<Ah now, less than ideal. On the whole fish and frogs don't mix.>
There are about 3 large, thick branches coming up out of the water for
the tree frogs and toad to climb on and a couple of plants that grow
from water up and onto the branches. The toad and frogs seem happy and
healthy. They bark often and eat VERY well but the other day I noticed
that the fire belly toads right foot looks like it's disappearing or
growing back!???
<Sort of. Oftentimes, frogs feet get damaged, the tissue dies, and a
certain amount of rotting happens before things clear up. Maybe you've
seen the same thing with the feet of city pigeons? Anyway, the best
approach is to use a frog-safe antibiotic to prevent further bacterial
infection. Your local reptile pet shop should be able to set you right
here, but failing that, something like a Maracyn with Maracyn 2
combination should work great.>
It looks like a nub with 3 white toes growing out of it.
<Yes.>
Almost like a under-developed foot. I have searched for hours on a
hundred websites looking for a possible answer with no luck. I took him
out and put him in a small container with fresh dechlorinated water
until I can figure out what is happening to him.
<Analogous to Finrot on fish; some kind of damage or nipping, and after
that, a bacterial infection of some sort. Not necessarily caused by
water quality issues; could perhaps be water that's too warm or too
cold, or stress, or who knows what>
The only thing I can think of is the wood in the tank. Since the wood is
halfway in the water it looks like it's decomposing and there are a
million little bugs on the wood.
<Those are springtails and such; harmless. But if the wood is actually
rotting (i.e., you can see white fungus) then replace it with new
bogwood. Plain bogwood sometimes falls apart when old, but it just feels
soft or flaky, it doesn't actually smell like rotting things and doesn't
have fungal threads on it. Such bogwood is okay to use, but if it
disturbs you, replace with new bogwood.>
Since the tank came this way I thought maybe I'm just being paranoid
since I have a tendency to over analyze everything. Should I take the
wood out?
<See above.>
Should I bake it and then put it back in, making sure it doesn't touch
the water? Or is it fine the way it is? Is this what could be causing
his foot to be shrinking?
<Almost certainly not.>
And what should I do about it now? Thank you so much for taking the time
and energy to answer all the questions you get.
<Most welcome, Neale.>
Burrowing Fire Belly Toads - How long should they burrow
for? 9/23/12
Good Evening,
I have 5 fire-bellied toads in a 40L rectangle tank; four of the frogs
are Bombina bombina, and one is a orientalis.
<These do have somewhat different (thermal) requirements, so aren't the
best of companions.>
No, I haven't been cross breeding. I'm not ready to be a Grandma.
I have read that it is unhealthy for the Oriental to burrow for any
extended period of time but I cannot locate what would be considered
"extended".
Currently the European's burrow for roughly 6 hours at a time, while the
Oriental burrows for 2 - 3 hours at a time. Are these time frames
acceptable?
<For sure. In the wild they'd likely burrow for as long as they wanted,
and in wintertime, that could be weeks, months.>
All five frogs have lost a little weight, but not enough for me to
become overly concerned.
<Cool.>
Below is a little about their environment, and upkeep:
I filter the water, keeping the pH between 6.8 and 7.2 which gets
changed every week (or two if we're going to be honest here). I
don't use a heat lamp as they are well heated in the room, the water
temp is typically 17 - 18C while the land temp is 19 - 21C on any given
day. It is cooling down a little outside so those temps have
recently dropped a degree - which is also why I suspect they're
burrowing, they didn't burrow much during the summer.
<They may burrow in both summer and winter, but for different reasons.
But yes, in winter they'd be somewhat dormant, hidden away in damp logs
and suchlike.>
I am considering adding a lamp to increase the length of their day.
<A heat lamp is useful, but a daylight lamp is pointless. So if you're
spending the money, at least spend it on something with a use.>
I have their aquarium split half water (a little under 10 cm deep on one
side sloping up to just under 4 cm) and half land which consists of moss
and some plants. I've had bad experiences with live plants so I
keep artificial plants strategically placed for a nice bridge between
land and water. I feed them mostly crickets dusted with both Herptivite
and Calcium with Vitamin D3 which I keep in the aquarium with the frogs
instead of feeding daily. I also keep 5 small minnows in the water
for an occasional treat which typically take a month for the frogs to go
through. I don't feed the minnows, they eat the crickets that
drown.
<I don't see any advantages and some possible risks to the use of live
fish used this way. Sticking with a "just invertebrates" diet minimises
the risk from parasites and malnutrition (read about Thiaminase) and
strange as it may seem, despite being "food", these fish could damage or
scare the toads.
You mightn't be aware of it, but if the toads are leery about going into
the water (in the wild, they'd avoid streams and ponds with fish) then
they're more likely to suffer problems like dry skin.>
I've tried both meal worms and red wigglers, but the worms were
completely ignored. Thank you for taking the time to consider my
question.
Coralee
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
injury, infection 4/22/12
Good afternoon. I have been caring for 2 fire bellied toads in our
classroom now for about 4 or 5 months and up until about a two weeks ago
things were going great. I noticed one morning that one of he
toads was floating in the water with one let sticking straight out and
it seemed a bit swollen but the other let seemed like it was curling in
on itself or so I thought. After taking a closer look I noticed
that his back right foot was gone. He was shaking a bit but
otherwise in good spirits. I took it out of the container
and put it in a smaller more portable one then took him to our local pet
store to see what they thought. They said it sometimes happens in
the wild and in captivity and that he would most likely be fine but to
keep it away from the other one for several weeks and to also make sure
that when I feed it not to leave the crickets in there for to long
because they may nibble on his wound. Never found the missing
foot. Is it
possible that the other toad ate his foot or what? I am a teacher
at a early childhood education school and I am at a loss for what
to tell the kids who are all 4 and 5. I want to be correct with
the information I give them and don't want to do anything wrong for the
toad. What do you suggest?
<Our resident herp. specialists appear to "be out", so I will ask you to
read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/FireBelToadF.htm
and:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/GenFrogHlthF.htm
for background, input. Bob Fenner>
Re: injury, infection /Neale
4/22/12
Good afternoon. I have been caring for 2 fire bellied toads in our
classroom now for about 4 or 5 months and up until about a two weeks ago
things were going great.
<I see.>
I noticed one morning that one of he toads was floating in the water
with one leg striking straight out and it seemed a bit swollen but the
other let seemed like it was curling in on itself or so I thought.
<Ah, not good. Do look up "Red Leg" before anything else. While these
toads are pretty resilient, they can be quickly infected with
opportunistic bacteria should they be both damaged and environmentally
stressed. If the injury is a clean amputation, and the water conditions
are excellent, the wound can heal without any intervention on your part.
Unfortunately, this isn't always the scenario, in which case prompt use
of antibiotics is required. Do read this page about Xenopus:
http://www.xenopus.com/disease.htm
Though your toads are a different species, the issues and medications
are identical.>
After taking a closer look I noticed that his back right foot was gone.
He was shaking a bit but otherwise in good spirits. I took it
out of the container and put it in a smaller more portable one then took
him to our local pet store to see what they thought. They said it
sometimes happens in the wild and in captivity and that he would most
likely be fine but to keep it away from the other one for several weeks
<A good idea.>
and to also make sure that when I feed it not to leave the crickets in
there for to long because they may nibble on his wound.
<Possible, but seems unlikely if the toads remain in the water all the
time. And do vary the diet a bit -- crickets are fine, if dusted with
vitamins first, but "as they come" they're nutritionally limited, and
even in the best situation, shouldn't be the only thing the toads eat.>
Never found the missing foot. Is it possible that the other toad
ate his foot or what?
<Decay…>
I am a teacher at a early childhood education school and I am at a
loss for what to tell the kids who are all 4 and 5. I want to be
correct with the information I give them and don't want to do anything
wrong for the toad. What do you suggest?
<I'm a high school teacher, and if all else fails, I tell the kids the
truth. If the issue is welfare -- the vivarium is too small, there's
nowhere for the toads to bask, the water isn't filtered and changed
enough -- then let them understand the cause/effect and then encourage
them to participate in improving things. There's a pretty good summary
here:
http://www.anapsid.org/bombina.html
At some point I should get something written about these popular
amphibians for WWM. We seem to be getting a flush of queries about them.
Anyway, hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
orientalis Eggs and Tadpoles
4/16/12
Hey Y'all,
I've got two Fire-bellied Toads in a fifty five gallon planted
tank with only about five gallons total water space; it's very
deep, about ten inches; they seem to enjoy it. <Good to know.>
There's several points of egress so they won't get stuck or tired. The
water isn't planted yet; my LFS has a crummy selection.
<Do try plain vanilla pondweed, or better yet, floating Indian Fern
("water sprite") as these won't be uprooted and provide nice resting
places at the surface where the toads can bask, which I'm sure you've
seen them do.>
We tried a tank with more water when we got them but swiftly realized
they preferred to bask/hunt on the land; we redesigned the vivarium.
It's planted with moss, and ferns with limbs, hides and peat for
digging. Their diet is varied; they're active and vocal. We've had them
for over a year and never expected them to breed thought we had males
actually.
<Ah!>
Now we have about 150 eggs which are already starting to hatch. I am
finding little detailed information for caring for them or what to do
with them if they do become toadlets. What is the activity level of
tadpoles immediately after hatching and then over the course of the
first few days?
<Not huge. Tadpoles tend to eat and sleep.>
I know they survive on the yolk for a time.
<Not that long, actually.>
Mine wiggle a bit then either sink or hang motionless and suspended at
the surface. Are they dead? Hungry? Cold perhaps?
<Don't worry so long as they look plump and they react if you gently
prod them and they move (a pencil or similar is ideal and less likely to
hurt them than a finger).
My water is at 70-72. Land right at 78.
<Fine.>
Will adults eat the tadpoles/toadlets?
<For sure. Isolate a few in a floating breeding trap or similar, and let
the others take their chances. You can be overrun with toadlets
otherwise, and that may not be the way you want things to go.>
In my experience with these guys if it fits in their mouth and moves
they'll eat it. Should I move them, if so what are the safest steps to
do so? I'd prefer to relocate the adults (which I'm prepared for and
comfortable with doing if needed) and raise the toadlets in the large
mature habitat if possible (I'm sure I'm bugging.. Sorry! I'm awed by
these little fellas).
<By all means do so. Isolate the adults to temporary quarters, or move
as many tadpoles as you can to a 10, 20 gallon system with a filter and
possibly a heater to maintain a steady 20-22 C/68-72 F.>
I can only find info about feeding the tadpoles fish flake..... Is this
really best?
<It's fine.>
As for the toadlets, they say simply "feed them small insects"... What
constitutes a small insect in this case?
<Fruit flies are the ideal. You can get wingless varieties from reptile
stores, and obviously these are best because they're [a] easy to catch
and [b] won't escape into your home.>
Obviously something very tiny. As for the eggs that still need to
hatch...
I see thrashing in some and that seems normal.
<Yes.>
Some are developed equally but aren't AS active, again still seems
fairly normal in my mind. And some have never advanced beyond a white
dot in the middle of the egg. Am I right in assuming since I've seen no
development in these eggs that they aren't viable?
<Correct.>
Should I remove them?
<By all means. Be ruthless. If you get 200 eggs, do you really want 200
toads? It may be better to concentrate on rearing, say, 20-30 tadpoles
that you can then sell as viable pet toads to your local store. Or maybe
just let nature take its course, and protect just 2-3 specimens that you
can add to your group of adults.>
However they ALL have what seems to be a film of dust over the eggs. It
appears to be particles of sand and peat that the toads have pulled with
them into the water. It hasn't stopped them from hatching. Should I
worry?
<White threads will be fungus, and these can spread and will kill viable
eggs. So that's bad. But plain vanilla silt is harmless. Still, gently
cleaning the eggs now and again, e.g., by using an air stone or even a
turkey baster to blow clean water (gently) past the eggs will be
helpful.>
To my way of thinking they would encounter this and more in the wild.
<For sure.>
Last thing.. The eggs are covering the internal filter and clinging to
driftwood and such. I need to clean the filter and the tank, what's the
best method to do a water change without suckin' 'em up?
<Actually, wet hands can work just fine. They are tougher than they
look.
Don't be afraid to damage a few: you'll have far more tadpoles that you
really need regardless!>
And how can I get them the heck off my filter? I'm worried it'll suck
'em up. I suppose you can figure most of my worries even if I managed to
forget something. They're hatching fast and it's wonderful. I want them
to live.
But the ones hanging suspended head up have me nervous. They simply
aren't swimming.
<Ah, if they don't move at all, then yes, likely dead. Either remove at
once, or else isolate into a net or breeding trap so you can wait a few
hours to see if anything changes.>
Oh! One frog shed his skin but didn't eat it... It's clinging to some
eggs.
Worry or no?
<No.>
Thank you thank you for any help you can give me. -Kay
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Orientalis Eggs and Tadpoles - 4/17/12
Thanks so much for the info! I've done a water change and removed the
leftover eggs and dead tadpoles. The ones hanging suspended were the
newest hatched and finally started swimming I've culled dead and dying
and ended up with about 150 tadpoles. We'll raise em and then keep or
sell what's left. There's no herp store here in town so I'm going to
attempt to breed
crickets and raise my toadlets on freshly hatched pinheads, will this be
suitable or should I think about trying to breed the little flightless
flies instead?
<Worth a try with the hatchling crickets, but wouldn't bank on it.
Vitamin dusting will be useful, as well as very regular meals; small
amounts, but 4+ times per day, ideally.>
One other thing has happened in he few days since I emailed you guys. A
friend of a friend purchased (I think they caught him in the wild,
myself but can't be certain) a Siren intermedia.
<The Lesser Siren; a fully-aquatic newt-like animal.>
Then became disgusted by it's slime coat and frills and so they brought
him to me which is good I suppose as they were attempting to house him
in an Red Eared Slider tank. :/
<Not compatible, for sure!>
Again.. Not much comprehensive care info online.. I think I've got the
diet down.. That seems to be one of only two things people agree on..
Diet and the fact that they are more active at night.
<Yes.>
No one seems to know what water parameters they prefer.
<Is a very widespread species, from the Eastern US to Mexico, so likely
quite adaptable re: pH, hardness, temperature. Room temperature water,
around 18 C/64 F up to low-end tropical conditions, 24 C/75 F, would
seem about right, perhaps at the cooler end in winter for extra vigour.
Water chemistry anything, just not too hard and not too soft; 2-20
degrees dH, pH 6-8 probably fine. I'd go with something in the middle,
around 10-15 degrees dH, pH 7-7.5.>
And there are lots of differing views on how a captive habitat should be
arranged. So far I'm housing him in a shallow water tank about room
temp, so between 72-74. I'm much distressed by the fact that I've
acquired yet another creature simply because folks are dumb. Anything
you can tell me would be great.
<Very similar to the Axolotl in general care. As ever, wean off live
foods (certainly don't use feeder fish). So by all means start with
earthworms as good "settling in" foods, but get them onto small slivers
of tilapia fillet (cheap and Thiaminase-free) alongside occasional bits
of prawn and mussel.
Use worms, krill, etc. as treats. I find steel forceps essential tools
for keeping predators, allowing me to wiggle dead foods and thereby
elicit the hunting instinct.>
In the meantime I'll be reading as much as I can find and trying like
heck to make him happy. I am also considering letting it go.. But am not
sure if that's a good Idea since I can't be sure if he's captive bred
and therefore not really suitable for release.
<For sure. Once an animal has been taken inside and especially if mixed
with domestic livestock (such as turtles) there's too many risks to be
happy about releasing it. This is a VERY unusual beastie, and to be
honest, I'd be thrilled to have one!>
He's common in our area. Could this cause a problem for the wild
population, i.e. New diseases and parasites not found here?
<Precisely so. Your local Fish & Wildlife people should be able to help
decide if release is a good idea, or else, you could try a herpetology
club or wildlife visitor centre type thing, where this sort of animal
might be used for education, to show visitors local animals.>
I'd like to make his new tank comfy if I keep him.. Ideally what size
tank, somehow 20 gallons of deep water and a piece of PVC doesn't really
strike me as the best idea?
<May well be fine from his perspective. Hidey-holes plus floating plants
is often the ideal for most animals. They don't have the same aesthetic
sense we do, and often value practicality above all else. Alternatively,
you can use bogwood and smooth rocks to create the right sort of terrain
with a more natural look.>
My observation is that they aren't strong swimmers, preferring instead
to scoot along the bottom basically mouthing on just about anything.
<These animals live in ponds and ditches, so aren't real picky. But they
may well take some time to settle in. Earthworms are great foods to get
them fattened up, and once feeding, they should become more
accommodating.>
They don't seem to see real well. And I'm reading about a life
span of something like 7-15 years.. Is this realistic..
<Yes, though temperature will be a factor, with the cooler end of the
range resulting in longer lifespan.>
I'm also seeing differing views on how big they'll actually become..
Thanks again for everything and sorry to be bugging about something new
so soon after asking about FBT's..
-Kay
<No problems. Cheers, Neale.>
Fire-bellied toad beh., terr... repro.
2/17/12
Hello. I have 2 fire bellies toads, Johnny and Jimmy, and I just bought
a third one, Loretta. I put Loretta in and Jimmy attacked her. How do I
introduce the new one with the old ones without her getting hurt?
Thank you,
Lacey
<How big is the tank? Jimmy probably didn't "attack"
her as such, rather he may have attempted to mate, and that can look a
lot like wrestling. A decent-sized tank and plenty of floating plants
(Elodea for example) can make all the difference.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: re:
It's a 20 gallon long tank with a waterfall filter, and around 6
plants dispersed around the tank.
<Floating plants?>
But the little girl had escaped around 5 days ago and we haven't
found her... I wish we could have! And how can I keep the temp and
humidity up? I have placed a piece of cardboard over the top, cut a
hole where the light goes but I can't seem to maintain the right
temp or humidity.
<Indeed not. Cardboard, being porous and good at absorbing water,
allows humidity to escape. Get some glass or Perspex cut to size if the
tank doesn't have a hood. Be sure to leave a half-inch or so gap at
either end so air can flow through, otherwise fungus becomes a
problem.>
I have a heater but it doesn't seem to work very well.
<What sort of Fire-Belly Toads are these? The standard sort,
orientalis, is fine at room temperature provided it has a hot basking
lamp above the land part where it can warm up, or even better, above
the shallowest part of its pool of water. It'll sit/float there
warming up if it needs to. Otherwise use an under tank heater of some
sort. These aren't expensive to buy or run.>
Thank you!
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: re: 2/17/12
Thank you! There are a few plants that are anchored to the bottom that
float on top of the water. And we have a uv light on the land part but
it doesn't give off heat at all. I think they are oriental fire
bellies toads but one is a brown and the other is a lighter brown
(almost yellow) with green splotches. The heater we have is for the
water and it keeps it at around 73 degrees. I read that it was a little
cold for them though.
<orientalis has a broad temperature tolerance, and around 22
C is fine as an average, slightly cooler in winter and slightly warmer
in summer being ideal. They aren't tropical animals but
subtropical, so some slight variation is good. Keeping the land warm
and the water cooler is better, so an under tank heater or a basking
lamp will be much safer and better than a heater in the water. Cheers,
Neale.>
fire belly toads, repro.
12/1/11
We have three fire belly toads and have had them for maybe two months
now.
When I fed them tonight I noticed a "large" clump of jelly
laying on the moss against the glass. I have no idea what it is and I
have never seen anything like it before. Can you help me?
<Could well be their eggs. Like other toads they lay eggs in a
jelly-like mass just below the waterline. The eggs hatch in a few days
depending on the temperature, and each day you should see some change
in the black embryo inside each egg.>
Also, I have a question about the layout of the tank. I have read
articles that say they don't need a lot of water because they
don't really swim, but a lot of other tanks I've seen online
have a large body of water for the frogs to swim in. What is the best
way to set up your tank? With large body of water of not?
<The answer depends on the size of your vivarium! Obviously in the
wild they jump into ponds, lakes and streams, so they can swim
perfectly well in bodies of water thousands of times larger than even a
very big vivarium.
But at the same time, wild toads will be crawling about on land for
much of the time as well. So, the key is a balance. If you have an
average-sized vivarium based around a 20-40 gallon aquarium, then
providing a water depth of 4-6 inches should be ample, and the rest of
the tank can be moss, coir, or whatever else you've used to create
a soft, damp land habitat.>
Thanks for your help.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Bloated fire belly
11/13/11
To whom it may concern,
My green fire belly toad started to shed its skin like
two weeks ago. He's still bloated and now his tongue is sticking
out. He's not moving and has notost
< not lost?>
any color. I thought he was dead but his tongue is moving. The other
fire belly toad I have is normal and eating healthy and still likes to
go near him. I don't know what to do?
Thank you for your time,
Shannon
<Shannon, do need some information on this toad's environment.
Fire-Belly Toads are temperate-zone species that appreciate
room-temperature water, proper filtration to keep their water clean, a
varied diet, and a dry land area that is at least smooth and ideally
contains something they can dig into, either coconut husk or moss. Kept
properly, they can live a long time, typically 10-12 years. If they
sicken or die prematurely, there's usually something wrong with
their environment. Common problems include poor water quality (i.e., no
biological filter); tap water not properly treated before use to remove
ammonia, chlorine, Chloramine and copper; monotonous diet; lack of
humidity in the land half of the tank; and handling by their owner that
causes damage to their skin. Once frogs and toads are stressed or
damaged, they quickly become subject to bacterial and fungal
infections, and these are very difficult to treat. A vet should be able
to prescribe the right medication, assuming the frog or toad isn't
too far gone, but otherwise prevention is always the best way forward,
rather than trying to find cures. Without information about his
environment (size of the tank, filtration method, temperature, diet,
etc.) it's impossible for me to give any specific treatment ideas.
But without information to the contrary, my assumption would be that
the problem is environmental, and even if this toad can't be saved,
you need to establish what's wrong if you want to keep the other
one healthy .Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Bloated fire belly 11/13/11
Thank you for all the info. He didn't make it.
<Too bad. Not unexpected though, given what you said was
happening.>
I have a filter and I didn't know you have to treat the water.
<Oh my, yes! Buy yourself aquarium water conditions like that used
for tropical fish. Ask your retailer specifically for one that removes
chlorine, Chloramine, ammonia and copper. That's the one you want!
All
these are very toxic to animals like your toad. The old school approach
of letting tap water stand overnight will allow chlorine to go away,
but Chloramine, ammonia and copper will remain. Much better to treat
your tap water at each weekly water change.>
I recently changed the type of water I was using.
<?>
I have big and small rocks because that's how I got them.
<Look for sharp edges. Even small puncture wounds and scratches
allow frogs and toads to become subject to bacterial and fungal
infections. If in doubt, remove everything from the aquarium except
stuff that's obviously smooth and safe. Good choices are ceramic
and plastic ornaments sold for vivaria, as well as clumps of pondweed
(toads like this stuff!) and of course the sand bank area of the tank
topped with coconut fibre or moss.>
I did notice that the water is colder than temp.
<Maintain these toads around or slightly above room temperature; not
too hot, not too cold. 20-24 C/68-75 F is ideal.>
It a 20 gal tank. I use a light and mist to try and keep temp and
humidity.
Thank you again.
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.>
Using Melafix
with Oriental Firebelly Toads 9/29/11
Hello,
<Amber>
I have an Oriental fire bellied toad that has what appears to be an eye
infection. The eye itself is slightly cloudy. The lower rim of its eye
appears somewhat gooey for lack of a better descriptive. Yesterday it
was keeping its eyes closed but today they are open more often than
closed.
The tank got a complete tear down and clean up about 10 days ago - no
chemicals, everything just rinsed really well. We used bottle spring
water
<Mmm, not really suitable depending on make-up... May have too much
mineral content or not enough... What is pH, alkalinity? Is this system
cycled?>
and not tap.
We have a submersible sponge filter- no carbon. I have been reading the
archived answers on your site for other fire bellies with eye problems
and it seems that Melafix is the most often suggested treatment.
<Not by me, no>
I have a bottle but no idea how to actually administer it. It seemed
from the previous posts that I am to apply the Melafix directly to the
eye and not to the water?
Please advise.
Thank you for your time!!
Amber
<I'd place nothing here. Your frog will very likely cure on its
own w/ the system maturing. I would add a modicum (like half) of tap
water to the bottled. Bob Fenner>
My frogs died :-( 2/22/11
I've had two fire bellied toads for about six months now.
<orientalis I assume, the Oriental
Firebelly Toad.>
They've been healthy and happy as far as I can see. They eat very
well (gut loaded crickets as well as worms!).
<Okay.>
They have lights (purple nightlight is new, had a red one until two
weeks ago) for heat and uv (white light added in daytime because I turn
my heat down). I only have two in a 20 gal terrarium with one anole.
The anole stays on the "land" side, pretty much. The frogs
will leave the water often (feeding, exploring).
<Indeed. They like damp moss and peat for crawling around
in.>
There are several small plants in there, coconut bark for bedding. I
have several pieces of wood and some small rocks. They were still fat.
Today, the electric went out for a few hours when I wasn't home. My
neighbor said her heat never went off so I'm assuming mine
didn't either. The worst it could've gotten was 50-60.
<Hmm the thing is that Firebelly Toads are subtropical animals. They
hate being kept too warm. Room temperature, around 18-24 C/64-75 F, is
usually ideal for them. If you have a heating lamp for the Anolis, you
should find the frogs bask at the surface of the water if some of the
heat gets to the water, but otherwise you shouldn't need to heat
the water at all unless your house is very cold. Indeed, even in
winter, temperatures as low as 10 C/50 F will do them no harm at
all.>
When I got home, they were dead :-( They were outside their water
container (about 3" high, round pebbles on one side) dried up and
sprawled out. They have not had any white stuff on them or anything
else I noticed. They bark regularly.
<I see.>
Can you figure out why they died?? I'm so upset over this. I love
my terrarium and now am afraid I'll kill them if I get new ones. I
don't handle them (except for cleanings). I've done my homework
and believe they have a happy, healthy, well diversified home.
Thanks for your help.
Cara
<Firebelly Toads shouldn't be killed by cold, so the fact the
heater went off for a few hours isn't likely to be the problem.
Review other issues such as water quality (there should be a simple
filter, like an air-powered sponge, installed) and that they aren't
bring harassed by the Anolis (personally, I wouldn't mix them
because of their considerable differences in requirements). Try and get
a book called "Keeping Amphibians" by Andrew Gray, a short
book sold very inexpensively at places like Amazon (where it sells for
under a dollar!). It is filled with lots of excellent tips on keeping
these toads, and is squarely pitched at those who don't want too
much technical detail, Latin names, and all that sort of stuff. Cheers,
Neale.>
*******PLEASE HELP !!!!!!!FIREBELLY TOAD EYE
INFECTION******** 11/19/10
Hello
I was reading your study you conducted regarding fire belly
toads, and I have a Question for you I was hoping you could
answer. My son had a fire belly toad as a pet he received it from
a friend and soon after he got the toad he experienced a really
bad eye infection. I read on other sights of the internet that
the toad itself can experience a cloudy like infection over their
eyes . This is the same reaction my son had...Is it possible that
he caught whatever infection he has from the Toad?... The
optomologist seems to think it is a herpes virus but I do not
agree... the meds they gave him did not work as expected and his
eye is starting to get the fogginess back and I think the doctors
are dumbfounded and do not know how to treat this infection
properly.... Can you please give me some insight on this ? I
would really appreciate it if you can give me any idea if my sons
symptoms is something that you came across in your research
Sincerely Michelle Spatz
<It is extremely unlikely that a toad would pass on a viral
infection. However, toads also secrete toxins through their skins
to defend themselves from predators, and if carried from hand to
eye, such toxins could very easily cause irritation, inflammation
or weeping. Furthermore, the warm, humid conditions in an
aquarium or vivarium can culture bacteria such as Salmonella, and
if basic hygiene practises are not followed, e.g., washing hands
after cleaning the tank, it is certainly possible for aquarists
to catch bacterial infections. Children are notoriously bad at
cleaning their hands after handling animals, and it is also
crucial to understand that a dirty, overcrowded aquarium with
overfed animals and under-filtered water is MUCH more likely to
culture dangerous bacteria than a spacious, clean, properly
filtered aquarium stocked at a low density. Generally zoonotic
infections (as they're called) are very minor and clear up by
themselves. Most people with a healthy diet and a normal immune
system will not be at any risk at all, and won't show any
signs of infection; in fact I think my immune system is quite
strong precisely because I've swallowed gallons of aquarium
water over the years! But individuals with a poor diet or weak
immune system can contract serious infections this way, and such
zoonoses are something to consider in such situations. Note that
zoonoses are not restricted to fish or frogs, and any pet, farm
or wild animal can pose a health risk to individuals with
weakened or compromised immune systems. We are not medical
doctors and cannot offer you any medical advice at all, morally
or legally. Consult with your own medical doctors and health
practitioners and act accordingly. One last thing, as/when you
write back, please don't send 6 MB photos! They really gum up
our e-mail system. Use iPhoto or whatever to resize the images
down to, say, 640x480 pixels, or less than 500 KB. We do
specifically ask for that at the place where you found our e-mail
address, and sticking to our few minor rules is one of the things
you can do to make it easier for us to help you. Cheers,
Neale.>
|
|
**Foamy water after fire belly toad death
11/08/2010
We had 2 fire belly toads for almost 2 years and one died. We replaced
it 2 weeks ago and it died last night. Then the frog we had longest
died a couple of hours later. They are in a small aquarium that is
cleaned weekly and fed only crickets that have been covered with
vitamins. The water is dechlorinated. They have a dry area and a wet
area. The water area has a filter. After we took the dead frog out, the
water started to foam like large soap bubbles. We have never cleaned
the tank with soap. The frogs have been healthy and eating then just
dropped dead and then the foam formed in the tank. What happened?
Debbie M
<Hello Debbie. It's unlikely that whatever killed the frogs
caused the foam. But organic material from dead animals, or for that
matter mucous produced by stressed frogs shortly before death, can form
foams when mixed with air and water. If you've ever seen foam along
the seaside or a large lake, or for that matter a protein skimmer in a
marine aquarium, you'll be aware of this phenomenon. The organic
material may be unrelated to the death of the frogs, or even
tangentially related, in the sense that whatever caused the foam also
stressed the frogs, though the foam itself didn't cause the death
of the frogs and wasn't in turn caused by the death of the frogs.
In other words, you have to keep you mind open on this one! Let's
recap what Fire Bellied Toads need, because the usual reason for death
is poor care. Cold-blooded animals can take a very long time to weaken
and die, so simply because they lived for a year or two proves nothing
either way about how well they were looked after. Put another way, a
good lifespan in captivity for orientalis, the Oriental Fire
Bellied Toad, is 20 years, so dying after 2 years is very abnormal
indeed, and for both of them died within a few weeks of each other,
that implies more than mere bad luck but something very wrong with your
vivarium. So, here are the basics. Firstly, a reasonably big vivarium;
a 20 gallon tank should be adequate for 2-3 specimens. I'd go for a
"tall" one in this instance because it's easier to
decorate but it shouldn't matter too much either way. Next, the
tank needs shallow, luke-warm water, about 8-10 cm/3-4 inches at most.
This should be filtered using a small fish tank filter; a small
air-powered box or corner filter would be ideal. Use a heater if your
home gets colder than 15 C/59 F, but you'll probably need to keep
it at its lowest setting and make ABSOLUTELY sure there's a heater
guard over the heater (many heaters come with these already, but if
yours doesn't, buy one). Otherwise you shouldn't need a heater
if the vivarium is kept in a centrally-heated room. Stick a clump of
Pondweed or Indian Fern in the water. Fire Bellied Toads love floating
among plants under a warm light! Use smooth gravel to form the
substrate at the bottom of the watery part, then build it up to form a
hillock at the dry end. Shore this up with smooth pebbles and bogwood
roots. You can alternative use a vivarium expressly designed for
amphibious animals that has a watery compartment and a dry land
compartment, but do bear in mind that anything less than 20 gallons
isn't really worth using. Place moss on the land part to create
something soft. These toads are easily damaged by sharp gravel, and the
moss provides a good place for them to rest and cool down. Add some
smooth ornaments of whatever sort you want to provide extra hiding
places above the waterline. Keep the air humid by placing a lid on the
tank, but there should be some ventilation to stop fungus. If you have
good lighting, any number of houseplants can be grown in the land side
of the tank. Clean the tank regularly, throwing away soiled moss as
required and changing the water at least weekly. Diet should be more
varied crickets! While useful snacks, they lack moisture and are not
nutritionally complete. Instead offer a variety of invertebrates:
earthworms, spiders, mealworms, and so on. Do not handle these frogs;
it's bad for them and bad for you. If you haven't already
bought a good book on keeping amphibians, let me recommend
"Keeping Amphibians" by Andrew Gray, an excellent book that
can be bought used from Amazon for the princely sum of one whole cent.
Cheers, Neale.>
Sexing Fire bellied toads. 8/26/10
Hello WWM.
I have recently decided to try keeping fire bellied toads and I have
some questions regarding gender identification.
<Indeed; this is not easy to do.>
It seems there is quite a large quantity of conflicting information on
the proper method of sexing these amphibians. Some people seem to think
the bumps of the skin are greater in number in males, while fewer on
females "others say its the reverse" I've also been told
that there are black stripes on the females bodies and on males there
are small spots instead "again some say its the reverse" The
people at the LFS claim the Middle digits on the rear legs are longer
on females and the webbing between them is shorter.
<As with most frogs and toads, the males have stronger arms and
during the mating season develop horny pads on the inside of their
hands used to provide extra grip during Amplexus. These are by far the
best traits.
Females tend to be a bit more rounded than the males, especially during
the mating season.>
The Sounds also seem to be Significant factor as the males allegedly
make more noise.
<Males are the ONLY ones that croak.>
the sound the males make has been described as a barking sound. And
despite all of this I have read cases where the gender was
misidentified.
<Yes indeed.>
could I get some clarification regarding this? with all of this
conflicting info on the net I thought it prudent to ask the
experts.
Thanks.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Sexing Fire bellied toads. Hlth. now
8/28/10
Thank you for replying so quickly!
<My pleasure.>
You have provided useful information.
<Glad to hear it.>
I have some questions I forgot to ask. I noticed today there seem to be
a small patch of slightly lighter colored Green skin on the back of
this one fire belly. The patch in question is located just behind the
skull, actually it looks as though there are two tiny patches. This is
normal?
<Not normal, no. But difficult to say if actually harmful or merely
some genetic abnormality. A photo would help. Do be aware that
amphibians have skins that are easily damaged, and they should never be
touched with dry hands, and even with wet hands handling must be only
when 100% essential. Once damaged, they quickly become prone to
opportunistic bacterial and fungal infections.>
Also today I had to remove the fire belly from the tank for some
maintenance but the toad managed to jump to the carpet. I immediately
caught him again only to have him jump on a blanket. From here I moved
him into a proper container and from there back to the tank.
<Hmm>
I wouldn't be as concerned in this were a reptile or a mammal but I
have been told Amphibians are prone to absorbing cleaning agents and
other hazardous chemicals through there skin which are fatal to them.
It seems uninjured from the jumping but I am skeptical that the animal
could get away with crawling on the carpet without somehow suffering
some ill effects.
<The walking on the carpet shouldn't be too bad, but being
grabbed with anything washed with laundry conditioner isn't going
to be helpful. With amphibians, the best approach is to either use wet
hands to catch them, or else drive them into a plastic container like a
Tupperware so they can be lifted back to their vivarium.>
I tried feeding the animal afterward and it didn't have a problem
eating but I'm not sure if that matters. What can potentially
happen in these situations?
<Well, the damage is done now. Just have to see what'll happen.
With luck you'll be fine. But do make yourself aware of the early
signs of bacterial secondary infections such as Red Leg so you can act
should things take a turn for the worse.>
Thanks again.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Sexing Fire bellied toads. 8/29/10
Okay,
Thanks for the heads up.
I will monitor him to see if anything occurs. so far it seems fine.
<Good.>
Oh and to clarify in case I did not make it clear, I did use wet hands
to catch it, and he was indeed deposited in a empty Tupperware
container during the tank maintenance. it was not actually grabbed with
anything except my hand, the only thing I think the animal came into
contact with was a blanket that the he landed on.
<Okay.>
I have tried researching Red leg disease just in case. I am curious
though,
Since these animals have red undersides to begin with how can you
determine if red leg is present.
<Very different! Red Leg is more like Finrot or for that matter an
open wound on a human.>
Specifically how does the disease manifest, does it resemble a rash,
lesion or a growth of some type?
<The first two in your list. Starts off as a sore or bloody rash,
and then becomes more severe. Usually fatal by that stage.>
Thanks again.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Quick question about adding Plantation Soil for Fire Bellied
Toads 6/10/09
I just changed over my fire bellied toads 20 gallon with new plantation
soil
<Are you referring to the Exo Terra product:
http://www.exo-terra.com/en/products/plantation_soil.php>
and was curious if I should wait for it to dry before I add it to the
aquarium.
<If so, no, not necessary>
I just put it all in and put a layer of fresh moss on the top but was
thinking afterwards that it might cause mold if it is still somewhat
moist.
<Mmm, no>
I thought that perhaps the light would just dry it out as long as I
don't keep misting any water in there.
Any input would be greatly appreciated,
Don
<Welcome. Bob Fenner>
Fire bellied toads questions :D 5/14/09
Hi, I was just curious if I want to watch my fire bellied toads at
night is it alright to use a fluorescent black light?
<I don't know for sure. Certainly, I'd only use this UV
light for short periods: some animals can detect UV light (we
can't) and UV light can, over long periods, cause health problems.
To be honest, you might find a row of dim red LEDs rather more
effective.>
Also, if my terrarium only has about 600ml of water in it, if the fire
bellied toads happen to mate will they be able to lay eggs in the
dish?
<For want to anything better they may do, but it certainly isn't
enough water for the eggs to stay healthy. Just like the tadpoles, the
eggs need clean, filtered water.>
Thank you very much,
Don
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fire bellied toads questions :D 5/14/09
Thank you very much for your response to my questions, as for the my
second question, if they toads were to lay eggs in the small water dish
I have put in the terrarium I would definitely transplant them into
another terrarium with more suitable living conditions.
<Cool.>
Thanks again,
Don
<Happy to help. Cheers, Neale
A couple of questions about fire bellied toads terrarium...
05/09/09
Hi, my name is Don. I just purchased 3 fire bellied toads. I have a 20
gallon terrarium set up with a water dish roughly 7 by 6 inches and
about an inch and a half deep. I am going to be using tap water for the
water dish so I purchased a bottle of Aqua plus tap water conditioner.
On the bottle it directs to use a capful to cleanse 37.8L of water
however I am only using it for a rather small amount of water. I was
told by the person whom I spoke to before purchasing the toads to put
approximately 5 or 10 drops in order to cleanse the water. I just want
to make sure that this is a good amount and be certain that it will
cleanse the water enough for the fire bellied toads and whether or not
I should use more or less.
<Sounds about fine. The dish here is 18 by 15 by 4 cm = 1080 cm3, or
slightly over a litre (1000 cm3). So you're going to need about
1/37.8 of each cap, which really isn't very much. You could find
out how many drops it takes to fill the cap, and then divide that by
37.8 to get the precise amount required. But much better if that cap
actually says how many millilitres it contains, let's say 20 ml for
an example. All you'd need to is divide that by 37.8, to get
roughly 0.5 ml per litre of tap water. Even if the cap doesn't
quote it's capacity, you could work it out easily enough: one level
US teaspoon is just under 5 millilitres (4.93, to be precise). So
you'd fill the cap with teaspoons of water, and multiple the number
of teaspoons needed by 5 to get its capacity in ml.>
Also, when decompressing Exoterra Forest Moss it says on the package to
mix with tap water. I was curious if the water should be treated with
the Aqua Plus before I mix it with the moss.
<Ideally, yes, but in reality, it won't make much
difference.>
I was intending to do so myself however I accidentally added the tap
water and put the moss in the terrarium before I realized that I had
not conditioned the water first. Basically I want to know if, having
this happen the one time, is it likely to cause any damage or sickness
to the toads?
<If you under-dose water conditioner, you can set the toads up for
problems via skin irritations, so there's an argument for taking
the time to get it right, at least first time around. Once you've
calculated how much you need, you can write it down, stick that note on
the fridge, and just refer to it each time you do water
changes.>
Thank you very much for your time,
Don
<Cheers, Neale.>
Fire bellied toads, beh., sys., hlth.
12/22/08 Hi, <Hello.> I need a little help with our fire
bellied toads. We have 4 of them, and have had them for about 2 years.
They are in a 40 gallon breeder half and half tank. The water area is
maybe 3-4 inches deep, sloping (gravel bottom) upwards towards a ramp.
The ramp connects to the land section, which is suspended above a false
bottom. Drainage is very good, there are live plants, and we change the
soil maybe 4-5 times a year. There is, in total, about 8 gallons of
water. It is filtered by a canister filter which contains mechanical
and biological media, as well as carbon. We test the water for ph,
nitrates, and ammonia every few days, and though we've never seen
anything change or spike, we do a full water change every 2 weeks or
so. We use only bottled spring water. The toads are fed a diet of
mostly live crickets, which are fed with commercial calcium
supplemented feeds and watered with the commercial cricket drinks. The
air is generally around 70-75 degrees. Humidity depends on the weather,
but in the winter time here, I can't seem to get to hold above
60-70%. <During the winter it likely doesn't matter so much.
These toads are somewhat seasonal, and in the wild will become dormant
in winter, hiding under logs and in other damp niches. So long as
there's some moss and a cork (or similar) cave into which they can
crawl, they'll find local pockets of moisture more than adequate to
their needs.> Anyway, about a month ago the toads all seemed to
become lethargic, and are much less enthusiastic about eating. All of
them are plump, and have not begun to lose weight. They also seem to
keep their heads to the ground, and keep their eyes closed a lot. I
thought maybe it was just because of the winter, then I noticed clouded
eyes, and it appears a white substance (fungus I assume) has appeared
around the eyes. <Yes, these toads will rest a lot more in winter,
though whether they truly hibernate is debatable. So cutting back food
as the tank cools down to a minimum of, say, 15 C is just fine. But if
your toads show signs of secondary infections, then treatment is
important. Use a proprietary anti-fungal treatment of your choice; your
local reptile-centric pet store should have a variety. Avoid anything
based on either salt or tea-tree oil (e.g., Melafix/Pimafix) as these
products tend to very unreliable.> We moved them all to a temporary
habitat and did a complete cleaning and reconstruction of the main
habitat, and then moved them back and attempt to keep the habitat very
clean. Two weeks later, no change in behavior has occurred, and the
white eyes persist on 3 of the 4. Tonight I set up an alternative,
aquatic habitat treated with Pimafix, and plan on putting the 3 with
cloudy eyes in there nightly. <Pimafix has not been medically tested
and isn't recommended by vets. We don't recommend it either.
It's just too inconsistent as a treatment. If you had a bacterial
infection and the doctor offered you an untested tea-tree oil potion or
an antibiotic proven to work for decades, which would you go for?> I
don't like resorting to meds or chemicals, but I felt like
something needed to be tried. Is the Pimafix an appropriate and safe
treatment? <Safe, yes, appropriate, no.> Is there another course
of action you would recommend? Should all 4 go in? Thanks for any help
you can give. Pat <Would treat all 4 at the same time, just to be
sure. If anti-fungal medication doesn't work, try something
anti-bacterial in case of such an infection. Some medications treat
both, and such would be ideal in this instance. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: fire bellied toads_followup 1/14/09 Hi, <Hello!>
Just wanted to let you know how things were going with our sick fire
bellied toads. After your advice, we actually continued the Pimafix for
a few more days while searching for an alternative, frog safe
antifungals are difficult to find over the counter, and we figured
Pimafix at the very least couldn't hurt. <"Couldn't
hurt" is about as far as I'd go! Tea-tree oil is a mild
antifungal at best, and in terms of results, very inconsistent. Some
folks swear BY it, others swear AT it.> The eyes of 3 of the 4 toads
cleared up either due to the Pimafix, or on their own and were moved,
as a group, back to their freshly cleaned habitat. <Well done!
Probably a mix of both the Pimafix slowing down the problem and the
immune system fixing the problem.> Feeding took a few more days, but
those three have all since resumed feeding and their eyes have remained
clear. The 4th toad got worse, his whole face became engulfed in the
white stuff, even becoming bloody, and he became very lethargic and
seemed afraid of food and water. He was separated from his tankmates,
and we took him to the vet. <Good.> The vet felt the most likely
answer was that the sickest toad was injured by a cricket, and it
became infected. <Can indeed happen. It is crucially important to
select prey of appropriate size for your pet.> I was skeptical as I
thought it was a fungus, but we followed her advice. <Generally very
wise.> The vet prescribed 0.03 ml of Baytril (diluted I think)
orally daily for 10 days, and Neo-Poly-Baci + Hydro to be applied
topically to the white area for 7 days. We were unable to get him to
take the Baytril orally without hurting him (small toad), so we applied
it topically to the infected area, let him sit for 10 minutes, and then
applied the Neo-Poly-Baci. For 7 days we saw little improvement, but
then the infected area began to shrink. Today was the 11th day, the
first day without treatment, and the infected area seems limited to a
small area between the eyes, and it isn't white anymore, more of a
clear shiny looking surface (scar tissue?). And tonight, I'm happy
to report he ate for the first time in a month, and he was quite hungry
and hunted energetically, 4 crickets. <Brilliant! Sounds as if this
is a success.> They are still separated and will continue to be
until the one who saw the vet is completely better. But I sit here
tonight with 3 toads who are eating, calling, climbing and jumping like
toads should. The sickest has resumed hunting and I hope he's on
his way to recovery, but he still has a little ways to go. Thanks for
your help. Pat <This is a nice story to hear. Usually we only hear
the front end of the tale, when the animal is sick, and don't
always hear back after the animal in question has got better. So thanks
for sharing. Enjoy you pets, Neale.>
Thank you for your fabulous web site...and... (orientalis; diet, winter) 10/5/08
Dear Wet Web Media Crew,
While searching for information and advice about our relatively new
fire belly toads I stumbled across your web site. It's fabulous;
I've only read one page and I already know more than I ever thought
it was possible to know about the different sorts of amphibians people
keep as pets.
<Thanks.>
However, I didn't find an answer to the question I had Googled: Do
captive Fire Belly toads slow down in the winter months?
<Oriental Fire Belly Toads (orientalis) are temperate zone
animals, and should indeed be kept cold in winter. They need to
"slow down" as you put it, otherwise they are less healthy
overall, and will certainly live shorter lives. The recommended
wintertime temperature is 10-15 degrees C, compared to around 20
degrees C in summer. While they don't actually hibernate, they will
need less food (perhaps half as much, and with any uneaten food quickly
removed).>
Since July we have had two such toads living in a luxurious 10 gallon
aquarium that has a filter, plenty of plants for them to float with, a
lovely deep section for them to swim in, a gentle slope for them to
hang around on and a pebbly section for them to catch crickets on.
<Do offer a variety of foods: crickets by themselves are not
"well balanced", although dusting with vitamins and
gut-loading across a few days prior to use helps dramatically. Even so,
single food diets are never a good idea, and at best the toad will get
bored with them, and at worst you'll have a problem with vitamin
and mineral imbalances over time.>
I've noticed that over the past week the darker colored of the two
isn't particularly interested in eating. Both of the toads used to
swim eagerly to the pebbles whenever they heard me banging the cricket
tube onto the side of the aquarium to get their dinner out. Now neither
comes over at all at first. If I encourage them to swim to the side the
bright green one will eat a couple of crickets, but the darker one
won't go after a cricket unless I really encourage him to do so. He
even lets the crickets jump on his head and his back and he won't
try to eat them. Both of the toads swim and float as much as before,
their only change has been their interest in food.
<Do consider boredom and simple slowing down due to dropping
temperature.>
If the problem were just the one little guy I would be a little more
concerned, but because both of the toads are less interested in the
crickets than they had been it seems as if they could just be slowing
down for the winter. The temperature in our house and in their aquarium
has remained the same so if they're noticing that it's getting
closer to winter they must be noticing the change in the amount of
sunlight.
<These toads do need strong sunlight or better still a basking
light. Unlike most other amphibians, which tend to avoid direct light,
these toads actively bask, much like reptiles. Whether they need this
for good health (as do reptiles) I cannot say, but it is generally
recommended that anyone keeping these toads plan around their needs and
supply some sort of light.>
I'd appreciate any information you can give me about how Fire Belly
toads spend the winter. Thank you.
Elaine
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Thank you for your fabulous web site...and... (orientalis;
diet, winter) 10/5/08
Hello again, Wet Web Media Crew,
Thank you so much, Neale, for this prompt and informative response to
my fire belly toad questions. I'm so glad to know there are people
out in cyberspace, such as yourself, who can help us novice pet owners
with our minor issues. Of course, nothing takes the place of quality
veterinarian care and we're lucky to have a practice very close to
us which is recognized for its competence caring for small and exotic
animals.
<Happy to help.>
My comments on your points, and a few additional questions, are as
follows:
<OK.>
We try to feed the toads some mealworms when possible but mealworms are
practically impossible to fine here in eastern Pennsylvania. Most of
the pet stores claim there's a 'nationwide shortage' of
mealworms, prompting my boys and me to wonder if we could make a
fortune in mealworm farming. Superworms are available but they
don't look like anything the toads or the juvenile leopard gecko
would eat. (The gecko has her own habitat in her own
20 gallon aquarium; of course she doesn't live with the toads). The
Superworms are so large so I think that even if the toads or gecko
could bite one in half, once they're bitten and stop moving
they'll also stop being food in the minds of the animals. We also
tried some sort of red wiggly worms that came in a little container at
the pet store. They were probably red wigglers but I don't remember
now. The darker toad sometimes took a worm but the bright green one
always ignored them.
<Do also try stuff from the garden, such as earthworms, assuming you
don't spray the garden.>
I agree with your other posters who mentioned that feeding the toads is
very time consuming, having to wait for the toads to eat the food
before the crickets jump into the water or the mealworms or red worms
burrow into the pebbles. Sometimes particularly determined crickets
have leapt out of the aquarium while the lid is off because I'm
rescuing a swimmer. Since the mealworms aren't very fast I put them
into a little bowl but it took the toads many feedings before they
would look into the bowl for food. At first they happily hopped into it
and out of it but didn't seem to notice they were sitting on their
potential dinner. Any crickets that the toads don't eat within what
I consider to be a reasonable amount of time - 5 to 10 minutes - get
flushed away. Do you think it's OK to either return these crickets
to the cricket keeper or feed them to the gecko?
<Both are fine.>
I never have because I don't want to transfer any bacteria or other
contaminants from the toads' most environment to the gecko or to
the other crickets who will eventually get their turn to be a meal. If
they can't become another food source, can I let them go
outside?
<They'll die outdoors; the crickets and mealworms sold are from
tropical countries and not likely to survive in the temperate
zone.>
To alleviate the toads' boredom we rearrange their habitat every
time we clean the aquarium. Of course, in a 10 gallon aquarium we
don't have a lot of choices, but we've come up with three
arrangements. Sometimes their 'land' area is on the side
closest to the window, sometimes on the other, and sometimes on both
sides with the swimming area in the middle. Sometimes all the plants
are in the deep part making it seem (to us) jungle-like in the water,
and sometimes only one or two plants are in the deep part (still giving
the toads plenty of surface leaves to hang around on) but making the
'land' area a bit more lush and cricket stalking a little more
difficult. To one of your posters you mentioned changing out only a
portion of the toads' water when cleaning the tank. Please tell me
if we've been a little too fastidious with our tank cleaning and if
we could back off on our regime, at least every other time we change
the water. We always transfer the toads and a little of their tank
water to the container they came home in. Next we vacuum out as much of
the water and junk as we can and replace it with regular tap water and
water conditioner. Then we vacuum that water out, taking with it more
floating junk. Next we replace that water with more tap water and water
conditioner and dig deep into the pebbles and stir them all around.
This creates eve more floating junk which we try to remove with the
vacuum. Finally we arrange the pebbles and plants and filter the way we
want them and refill the aquarium with tap water and water
conditioner.
<This all sounds good; because amphibians are prone to skin
infections when exposed to poor conditions, erring on the side of
caution when it comes to cleanliness is no bad thing at all.>
Then the toads are allowed to return. As you can imagine, this is quite
the process, especially since the aquarium is in a bedroom and there
are a lot of trips to and from the bathroom with a bucket of water.
Many of those trips are made by a 10 year old. Is there any way we can
cut back on this, maybe doing it every other week, with just a water
replacement
on the off week? Do we have to put water conditioner in all the water
that goes in and comes right back out or is it only necessary for the
water the toads eventually live in?
<Add conditioner on a _pro rata_ basis to any new water added to the
aquarium. To be honest, with terrestrial amphibians, replacing 100% of
the water is a good idea.>
Thank you all again for this wonderful site full of information about
our pets and our ponds.
<No probs.>
Yours sincerely,
Elaine
<Cheers, Neale.>
Please
tell us what's wrong!! Spinning toads... No data
4/12/08 Hello, We are starting to get a little bit worried
about one of our twelve fire bellied toads. We call him Spinny
because every time he gets in the water he starts to spin
uncontrollably. <Mmm, not good> At first we thought he was
just one of those "freak" frogs... You know the one, a
little bit different from the rest. But as time progressed and
the spinning got more and more out of control, we feared
something might be seriously wrong. Especially when we noticed
that even his land behavior is kind of strange. His head bobs in
this strange way... What is going on? <Mmm, likely genetic
trouble... perhaps developmental... not likely (as all would be
affected), but possibly pathogenic> Is there something wrong
with his equilibrium? Is he sick? <Likely just this one> To
top it all off, we just recently noticed there is now a Spinny
number two. <Oh oh...> Is Spinny number one infecting our
entire population of toads?? Love, <3 <3 <3 Cochina
<Mmm, perhaps environmental... nutritional... Need to know
much more re what it is you're doing to keep these
specimens... Their systems, maintenance, foods/feeding... Bob
Fenner>
Re:
Please tell us what's wrong!! Spinning frogs 4/15/08 >
<Mmm, perhaps environmental... nutritional... Need to know
much more re what it is you're doing to keep these
specimens... Their systems, maintenance, foods/feeding... Bob
Fenner> Okay... Here goes... These "specimens"
a.k.a. frogs... reside in a 30 gallon tank. <Mmm, may need
more room than this... many amphibians are very sensitive to
metabolite build-up> It's set up with sand, rocks, trees,
water which is continuously filtered and changed weekly...
<... how changed? With pre-stored water I hope/trust> Even
a floating lily pad. The frogs are fed every six days. They are
given crickets for sustenance... Also the crickets are dusted
each time they are placed in the tank. The tank is heated and
maintained at a constant temperature of 77 degrees... The water
is always flowing and moving... There is even a waterfall. There
is also something else we forgot to mention earlier. Almost all
of the twelve frogs have these white dots around their mouth and
head area...Some have them on their legs also. Is this yet
something else we should be overly concerned with?? Thank you for
your time and any assistance you might provide. We love you.
<Do see the Net re the care of this species... and do please
include previous correspondence when writing us. I suspect the
same general issues as above... the environment and nutrition are
lacking. Bob Fenner> Sincerely, Miss Katrina Joyce Newsome and
Jimmy James
|
Tank Diversity... I'll say! And a partridge in a pear tree?!
2/18/08 Hello and thanks in advance. <Hail.> I've jumped
in feet first here and I feel slightly overwhelmed. I am trying to be
as conscientious as possible and want to offer the best environment
possible for the animals I've chosen to support. <For the love
of God, please tell me this is research *prior* to purchase. Obviously
these animals won't get along. One is big and aggressive, one is
soft and easily damaged, and the other is a land animal that drowns
when it falls into deep water. No chance whatsoever of these animals
coexisting in an vivarium.> I have a new 29 gallon tank with a very
young Red-Eared slider turtle, a Fire Belly Toad, a Hermit Crab
(species unknown to me). <Oh dear.> I have the tank divided into
three distinct "zones"; I have a tall pumice stone which
offers a place to climb and explore and where I deposit the food for
all of the animals. In the middle I have a 2-2 1/2 inch deep area
intended for swimming. And finally I have a raised, dry, sandy area for
the turtle to bask and for the crab to burrow/bask. I've also
planted a few small aquatic plants throughout each "zone".
<Water area too shallow for the Terrapin, but fatally deep for the
Hermit Crab.> I have a new UVB light and a new infrared light which
keeps the humidity and temperature within nominal limits and I
regularly test in each of the three respective areas. I have a new 140
gph filter and a heater in the swimming area. I am using decomposed
granite and aquarium gravel as substrate in the wet areas and washed
play sand in the raised "beach" area. <Hermit Crabs need
moss or coir (Coconut fibre) to burrow into when resting. Sand
doesn't hold moisture so well. In any case, the crab can't be
kept in this enclosure.> I have been reading as much as I can about
the animals and believe that I have provided an ample environment for
each of them. While I understand that a new environment and new
"roommates" can be intimidating, how do I ensure a good
quality of life for the inhabitants? <By keeping each in a
tailor-made environment specific to their needs. Firebelly Toads for
example need relatively cool water less than 24C, but this is too cold
for Terrapins. Conversely, while Terrapins appreciate a gravel
substrate for resting on while basking, Toads can swallow gravel and
die, and should NEVER be kept in enclosures with gravel. They need bare
glass or pebbles in the water side of their tank, and damp moss 5 or 6
cm deep over the gravel on the land side of the system. Again,
terrapins are hugely polluting animals that dump a lot of ammonia in
the water; toads are highly sensitive to ammonia, developing the
amphibian equivalent of Finrot, known as "Red Leg".>
I've never seen a tank divided like this and believe there is no
reason why it can't be successful. <Many, many reasons. Too
numerous to list here, but even a quick read of the literature on each
species should make these immediately obvious.> Please give as much
detailed information as you can afford. ~ Joel <Separate these
animals into their own systems, or else return two of them and
specialise on just the one. There is no way these animals can be kept
together. Cheers, Neale.>
Question About Firebelly Toads... spoogie
11/12/07 Crew, We have 2 Firebelly toads. We do not know the sex of
either. Every once in a while we get a clump of clear
"jelly-like" substance usually in the water. Obviously this
comes from the toads but we don't know if its an egg sack or just
some sort of secretion. Looking closely we cannot see any small dots
inside the clump. Do you know what these clumps are ? Pierce, Joy and
Eden <Greetings. What you're describing does sound a lot like
toad-spawn. Each egg is about 1 cm in diameter, but the developing
embryos are (at least to start with) very small, maybe one-tenth that.
So they're easy to overlook. The eggs are normally deposited on
plants close to the surface of the water. If cared for well (i.e.,
given a coldish sort of winter and then a moderately warm summer)
orientalis breeds quite freely in captivity. The tadpoles will
swim out of view for a the first couple of days; just like fish fry,
there's a period of time where amphibian tadpoles consumer the
remains of their yolk sac before actively foraging for food. Rearing
isn't difficult, but it probably goes without saying that the
parents will eat the tadpoles given half a chance. If you want to rear
them, you'll probably need to move them to another tank (or at the
very least a covered breeding trap of some sort). Cheers,
Neale.>
Question... Can two fire belly toads and a red eared slider
turtle live together in the same aquarium? 8/10/07 I think
the tank is 20gals and is a terrarium. we have a filter, heater and a
filter/water circulator. I have had some bad experience with previous
turtles and don't want the same to happen. A few years ago two of
my turtles that I had for approximately 2 years were eaten by a craw
fish that was supposed to be a treat for my painted turtles. the
crawfish was living under a rock eating the turtles fish and other food
sources for a couple months, ate one turtle then a few days later the
other. It was a big surprise when I drained the tank and found a
crawfish about three times the size it was when we bought it.
Especially since I thought it was already eaten because I didn't
see it for two months. Anyway if I put the two toads in the same tank
as the turtle which is about 2 and a half inches will they stay away
from each other and be able to live healthy? I know the kinds of
environments they both need and am just wondering about having a
variety of species living together. Is there any species that can
coexist with a red eared slider? <Greetings. No, you must not mix
frogs/toads with your sliders or for that matter crayfish. Sliders are
largely herbivores and 75%+ of their diet should be plant food,
particularly when they are adult. But that doesn't mean they
aren't opportunists, and in the confines of an aquarium they will
catch and eat anything. Even if they don't manage to kill the
toads, their nipping are likely to damage them and let fungus or some
other infection set in. Furthermore, your terrapins are very messy
animals and pollute the water heavily; the toads, by contrast, are
largely aquatic and require good, clean water. Bottom line, you
can't mix them. Now, you're mentioning feeder fish, and I'm
just going to remind you that [a] sliders don't need to eat live
fish; [b] live goldfish and minnows especially are a source of
thiaminase, a substance known to harm reptiles in the long term; and
[c] your terrapins should be mostly eating greens anyway. I mention all
of this because of your story with the crayfish; if I'm feeling
charitable I'd suggest you hadn't done your homework on how to
keep terrapins in captivity. Crayfish don't mix with anything,
period. Not even each other. Terrapins and turtles cannot be mixed with
anything but other terrapins and turtles of comparable size. Please
understand a red-ear slider get to the size of a dinner plate, so
before adding "tankmates", consider whether you have space
enough already for the ones you have. Realistically, you're after
something around 55 gallons for one or two specimens. So, be sure and
read the articles here at WWM about keeping red-ear sliders; there are
several of them, all good, and brim full of useful information. Cheers,
Neale
Fire Belly Toad With Infections I have a fire belly toad with
cloudy eyes and a swollen leg and have no idea what is wrong with him.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks. Sarah <Frogs are very
susceptible to infections when the water is not kept perfectly clean.
Start by doing a large water change, vacuuming the gravel and cleaning
the filter. If things don't get better in a couple of days then try
treating the tank with Myacin.-Chuck>
Firebelly Toad Changing Color
3/21/07 Hello! I am writing to you because I have a Firebelly toad
in my kindergarten classroom. I have two frogs in the tank, one of
which was adopted from our local petstore because he was born with only
three legs. Normally his color is green, but today we noticed that his
coloring is much darker than usual and the frog is not as active as
usual. Could it just be an off day or could something be wrong??
Thanks!! < They do shed their external skin so this just could
simply be a case of a toad getting ready to shed. Just in case do a
water change and clean the filter to see if he perks
up.-Chuck>
Fungussy Firebelly 3/12/07 Hi, <Hi, PufferPunk
here< I had wrote to you before regarding my Firebelly toad that has
a fungal problem, I think. You had told me to use erythromycin in the
water and it has not helped at all. His upper lip is red and he still
has the discolored skin near his eye and around his mouth. He is not
very active and is always hiding his face or has his head way down to
the ground. Any other suggestions? Thanks <Try adding
Melafix & Pimafix, in addition to the antibiotic already
recommended, for an added boost. Be sure to keep it's
water clean. ~PP>
Fat Fire Bellied Toads 3/4/07 I have one female
who has become large in the stomach region. Tank has river rock
and lots of live plants. She is active and likes to stay in the
shallow end of the water. Just recently, another female has begun
to get large but spends most of her time in the deep end. Their
diet consists of small crickets, mealworms, waxworms, and chopped up
earthworms. Humidity is between 80 - 100 and water
temperature ranges between 70 - 75 degrees. There is a total of 9
fire-bellies in a 56 gallon tank. Can you tell me what is wrong with
them? Some people have said they are with eggs and others say
bloat but have no idea how to tell which is which. Like I said,
both are very active and act completely normal. Any help will be
very much appreciated since I have been researching this for quite a
while and haven't found any answers. Thank you! Nicole <
Keep track of where the food goes. If these two in particular are
actively eating prey then I am going to assume that they are healthy
and may indeed be pregnant. If they are not eating at all and still
getting fat then it may be an internal infection.-Chuck>
Feeding Firebelly Toads Bugs from The Garden 2/18/07 My
name is Daniel and I have a Firebelly toad. I (accidentally, had a lot
to do that week) didn't feed him in around 4-5 days. When I
realized this at 9:30 p.m., my pet store had already closed. When I
went to check on him and he didn't move, so I tried pouring
water around him, still nothing. Finally, I slightly moved him,
and his eyelids opened, and within the next couple minutes
he started moving. Thinking he was very hungry, I went outside to find
bugs. I was able to find a grub worm, and I gave it to him.
I an sure there's nothing wrong with that, but I was just wondering
is it bad for Firebelly toads to eat grub worms? Just
wondering. Thanks,- Daniel <Most insects are harmless and
are actually very good food for your toad. You only need to worry if
you have put out some poison that may have been ingested by the bug and
carry the toxin to your toad. I have kept toads alive for years in
Sothern Calif . just by catching my own bugs and a few worms now and
then.-Chuck>
Cloudy Eyes on Fire-Belly Toad 1/16/07 Hi! <Hi
Sue, Pufferpunk here> I enjoyed reading through other amphibian
owners' questions but am still unsure of what to do for my
daughter's fire-belly toad. Both eyes are very cloudy and have been
for some time. I think I see a little blood around the edges too but
that may be irritation. He/she is still feeding normally but seems to
be in discomfort and is significantly less active that when his/her
eyes were clear. After reading through questions and responses, I'm
pretty sure it is a water quality issue. We can take care of the water
quality by cleaning the 10-gallon tank and changing the water more
frequently but I would like to get advice on treatment, as the
irritation or infection looks pretty severe and I would like to keep
the poor toad from going blind if possible. <Since these animals
eat, sleep & drink in water that they poo in, water quality is
definitely important.> I noticed that one Crew member's advice
to one owner was to put one drop of MelaFix in each eye daily but that
was an Asian bull frog. In answer to another question relating to
cloudy eyes, a different adviser suggested sulfa drugs in the water.
Could you please help? <Actually I was also thinking of using
Melafix for the eyes (I believe that's what you
meant?) Worked for some of my frogs. Be sure to
dechlorinate the fresh water, after cleaning the
tank. ~PP> Thank you so much!! Sue W.
Fire Belly Toad On Fire 10/22/05 Hi. I have 3
Firebelly toads. I've had them for about six years or so. Just
today, one of them started acting weird. It is very weak and has
constant spasms in its legs and body. Its stomach sometimes pulsates
and it can't jump. I have no idea what is going on and I was
wondering if you could help me out. Oh ya, and also its back legs
have a lot of mucus on them. I don't know if that's related,
but I just want to find out what's wrong with my toad. Thanks <
Frogs can succumb to bacterial infections. One in particular is called
red legged disease which is a bacterial infection on the legs of the
frog. The mucus on the leg may be this disease. It is difficult to see
on a frog when a red pattern is on the belly and legs already. Clean
the tank and the filter. Heard of some remedies using dyes and
antibiotics with mixed results. Sometimes the frog is too ill to
survive the treatment. Frogs in general are very sensitive to chemicals
in the water since they seem to absorb everything through their skin.
Isolate the toad from the rest so he doesn't contaminate the other
two. I would try a product from Jungle called Start Right. It is
a little Methylene blue and salt. This should inhibit the bacteria and
give you toad a chance to fight off the disease on its own. It looks
like it is getting worse then antibiotics would kill the bacteria but I
am not certain how the frog would react to the medication. I would
recommend that you look online at some frog site that have had success
in treating this disease to be sure.-Chuck>
Fire Pebbled Bellied Toad 6/16/06 Dear
Crew, I know for a fact that my small fire bellied toad just swallowed
a large pebble. She was going for her second cricket and
missed. I was trying to catch her to pull it out of her
mouth, but she choked it down. I don't think that there
is any way that she can pass that, unless these critters are extremely
stretchy. Is there anything that I can do? I
don't want her to suffer. Thank you, Linda < If the stone went
down then it can go back up. When the toad is ready I'm sure he
will cough it up.-Chuck.>
Firebelly toad hlth. - 09/01/06 Hi. < Howdy! >
I recently bought two young fire-bellied
toads. I have had them for about one week, and
they seem to be doing fine. But today one of them
has started making weird faces and rubbing his front feet over his head
and kicking his back feet around as if he were in pain or
something. I can see what looks like loose skin
clinging to his sides and am wondering if he is just shedding?
< Sometimes these guys are affected by excess metals and minerals in
the water. Have you tested the hardness of the water? They are also
affected by improper water quality: excessive ammonia and nitrites.
Last, but not least, air-borne pollutants and contaminants can have
this reaction as well. Aerosols, room fresheners, carpet fresh, etc.
will cause chemical burn. > He is even opening his mouth
and making faces, and I wonder is all this normal behavior
just to shed his skin, or might there be something
else going on? < Possibly shedding, but more likely a
chemical reaction. > Could he have swallowed a pebble or something
and maybe it has nothing to do with the shedding skin? <
I hope not, pebbles can be hard to pass! > Any advice
you could give would be greatly
appreciated. I've never had any type of frogs before,
only fish and turtles. Thanks. < I hope I
helped some. RichardB > Paula
Re: Firebelly toad 9/11/06 Richard, thanks so
much for responding. Believe it or not, I think
he was just shedding after all. After he got the
loose skin off, he resumed acting normally. A
little later, I was looking through a book from the library
on frogs and toads, and there was a picture of a toad doing exactly
what mine was doing, and it said that he was shedding his
skin and eating it and that this was normal frog
behavior. So I think he's OK! He's eating
and acting completely normal now. Thanks so much
for your response! < You are very welcome! RichardB
>
Help! My Lunch Is Stupid! - 04/04/2006 My fire
belly frog is eating. <Uh, good!> i <Oh my. PLEASE
capitalize your "I"s. For one, it shows some
healthy self-respect in your writing, and for two, we really
haven't the time to correct these....> bet your wondering why
I'm writing. <Indeed I am.> the <Ack! The
beginnings of sentences too, please?> problem is his silly food! I
get him crickets and they just dive right in the water and decide to go
swimming! <Hey, I would too! I love to be in the
water.> And then I end up spending 20 minutes trying to save the
dumb crickets but they just keep jumping to their death. <They
really are NOT the brightest, are they? By the time its all said and
done my poor frog eats 1 and the rest are dead! <A sad
waste. I can't tell you how many stupid gray/feeder
crickets I've met. I don't know how the species
continues to live....> I recently bought him ghost shrimp but he my
frog didn't even know they were there. They ended up living
together and he wont eat them. <Neat!> I don't know what to
do because at this rate I'm going to the pet store everyday! My
poor frog eats the crickets that don't end up jumping to their
death. I'm at my wits end and don't know what to do. I need an
easier option on what to feed him. <A couple of
options. The best, and healthiest, is to keep the crickets
in a separate container and only feed him a couple at a
time. In the separate container, you can feed them
("gut load" is one term for this) a high-quality fish food
and give them a piece of fruit for water. This will make
them better for your frog to eat and keep them alive until
feeding. Optionally, you can give them something in the
water at the surface that they can climb out on and not drown; a
floating plant (real or fake) may do the trick.> PLEASE get to me
quickly...... <As quickly as we could.> Thank you so much, -
Needing a Resolution <All the best to you, -Needing a Nap
(Sabrina)>
Amphibian and Chelonian mix 8.27.05 I keep my red ear slider
in an aquarium with 3 Firebelly toads, a tree frog, and a chubby frog.
I have the aquarium so one side is water and the other side is land. I
have been wondering, however, if the mix of reptile and amphibian is
safe. I do have a filter and light source and the animals
usually keep away from each other. Also, I used to have a soft-shell
turtle; I had kept him with the frogs (but at that time I had one
Firebelly). Sadly, he died in a weird way. A large, black, tube like
thing with feathery ends came out of his anus, and hung out about an
inch. We suspected that it had to do with the turtles eating habits,
for it ate up to six fish a day. Recently, I have been wondering if it
had to do with the frogs. I really don't want my red ear slider to
die, so please help. Also, we have been feeding the slider a more
reasonable amount of food. PLEASE HELP!! <I am not sure what the
large black feathery thing might have been, but it might be worth
contacting a reptile Veterinarian to find out. I would not
recommend keeping frogs with turtles. Turtles foul the water
very quickly, frogs and toads are very sensitive to the quality of
their environment and will not tolerate less than optimal conditions
for very long. I am not sure if the frogs and toads you are
keeping are toxic to animals that ingest them but it is definitely
something you will want to look into, I am sure a turtle would sample a
frog if given the opportunity. I would definitely keep the
turtle in a separate tank. I would also get some care sheets on the
different types of frogs you are keeping to ensure that your setup is
meeting their needs as well, heating, lighting, feeding, etc.
-Gage>
FB Toads Won't Eat 9/12/05 We have 2 fire belly
toads in a aquarium with a screen top they are on a bed of Jungle Earth
with a water bowl the room is usually 78-80 with a lamp above them .The
problem is that they won't eat anything we have offered crickets
mealworms brine shrimp canned crickets They also seem to
have a blackish film growing over their face and eyes I think they can
see but not positive What can I do? Paula Holcomb < The dust from
the Jungle Earth has covered their most skin and eyes and they probably
can't see. They won't eat what they can't see. I would
actually set them up more for frogs than for toads. Use fine sand
instead of the jungle earth.-Chuck>
Mixing Amphibians Can fire belly toads live with baby whites
tree frogs if they are about the same size? What about adding green
tree frogs to the mixture? <I would not mix any of these, they all
have different environmental requirements. If you want
entertainment go with the fire bellies, if you want an adorable frog
that is not as active, go with the Whites Tree frog. I like
tree frogs as well, but they are really jumpy, open the lid to clean
them an BOING! all over the room. Ok, it is not that bad,
but they are really fast. Do some research on all 3 and go
with the one you like best. -Gage>
Fire Belly Toads I've had my 2 fire belly toads for 3
years in a filtered 10g 1/2 full tank with 1/3 land today while feeding
one frog has lost more then 1/2 body weight and seems to have an
equilibrium problem only seeming to move one direction (very little
movement ) basking on land , with other frog standing guard in some
type of protective mode the sick frog was not strong enough to eat. I
feed once a week and dust crickets with Reptocal is there any thing I
can do I don't think it will make it very long and is there any
thing I'm doing wrong. <Well... you've got me stumped here,
I do not have much experience with fire belly toads. If I
had to guess I would say the problem may have started with the diet and
developed into something else. Most problems that I have
encountered with amphibians were related to problems with their
environment. The link below has some good information on
captive care of the Fire Belly Toad.
http://www.livingunderworld.org/anura/database/bombinatoridae/bombina/orientalis/
I would make sure I am meeting all of their
requirements. You could also try using google.com to search
for common ailments or diseases. A local reptile shop may
have some good information as well. Best of Luck,
Gage>
Black Lighted Frogs Okay thanks. I thought it would be
something like that. He does scuba dive near the filter ( it just so
happens the filter is near the heater too ). But I have yet another
question for you. One night, I turned all the lights out in my room and
I put a 15 watt tube black light above the Firebelly toad's tank to
simulate night. I came back perhaps 1-2 hours later, turned the light
back on, and looked in the tank. Jeff was scuba diving, Fred was on the
log, and Bob and Joe were some other place. To my surprise, their skins
were brownish-black ( even Jeff's, and he was underwater ) instead
of green! After a while their skins turned green again. I think it was
the ultraviolet light in the black light that did this, but is it safe
to do it again ( and will their skin turn green again every time )?
< Black lights do some amazing things to some animals. Never heard
of any ill affects from black lights. Humans are exposed to them all
the time but we are not frogs. Try using a ZooMed nightlight reptile
bulb instead just to play it safe.-Chuck>
FAT AND LAZY TOAD Hey it's me again! I'm sure you
heard about Jeff, my scuba diving Firebelly toad. Well, he hasn't
been as active as all my other toads are, and I'm just concerned. I
dust the crickets I feed them with Herpcare cricket dust so he is
definitely getting the proper amount of energy. He just sits under the
log hut I have in my tank most of the day. How do I get him to be more
active? < Assuming he is healthy, then I would do a big water change
and maybe rearrange the landscaping a little bit. If he is just fat and
content from eating, then I would feed smaller crickets so he has to
work harder to get the same amount of food. In the wild they probably
have to work a lot harder to get the same amount of
nutrition.-Chuck>
Scuba Diving Frog Hi its me again and in the reply you sent me you
didn't say anything about Jeff , "scuba diving", but
that's ok because it would be kind of hard to find stuff about
that. Anyway thanks for the advice about the tree frogs I'm not
sure I'm going to get them now because I would have no place to put
them. < It is normal for fire belly toads to dive under water for
periods of time. The area he hangs out may be near a heater, the outlet
of a filter or where some food can be found.-Chuck>
Mixing it UP in My Cauldron - Herp Question Hi there! I was
wondering if it was ok to mix Australian white tree frogs with
Firebelly toads because I might get some once I get the $$. And one
more thing: one of my Firebelly toads ( Jeff ) seems to like to go
scuba diving occasionally. He goes underwater in the deepest, most
secluded part of the tank, looking kind of dead ( which he isn't
because he swam to the surface after a while). he has done this three
times already. Is this normal and why does he do it? < White tree
frogs are very arboreal and are usually found at the upper levels of
the terrarium. Fire belly toads are very aquatic and usually don't
do too much climbing. If the tree frogs try and eat the toads then
there could be problems because the toads are somewhat toxic and I am
not sure of the effect on the frogs. To be safe it would probably be
better to keep them separate. You fire belly toads usually can swim all
over an aquarium but they really need a place to get out of the
water.-Chuck>
Firebelly Toads 3.28.05 Alright, I'm sorry if my improper
punctuation bothers you. <I must have missed the first message, I am
sure it was nothing personal, just a lot of emails to edit and post on
the website. No worries.><((((º> Anyway, my dad thinks I
should get a little fish to live in my Firebelly toad's pond. But
I'm worried that the firebellies might eat the fish or poison it
with their skin toxins, and the fish food might poison the toads. Is it
okay to get such a fish? And if it is, what species would be most
appropriate? <I'd leave the fish out of this setup, in my
experience firebellies will try to eat just about anything that
wiggles. I doubt eating the fish would harm the toad but it would not
be very fun for the fish. The fish and fish food will also foul the
toads water faster which means more work for you cleaning the pond.
Best Regards, Gage >
Bloated Firebelly newt Follow-up Thanks for the information. Any
cures for gut impaction other than hoping nature take its course?
<I would think you could use Epsom salts at a rate of 1 teaspoon per
ten gallons and if he is still eating you could use vegetables like
peas.>