FAQs About Anurans/Frogs:
Foods/Feeding/Nutrition
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
Health, General
Frog Reproduction,
FAQs on: Bullfrogs,
Fire Belly Toads, 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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Most likely the wrong forum, but am going to ask anyway.
Rana sexing, beh., nutr., sys. - 8/1/10
Hi again guys,
<Ave,>
I have a frog that was captured from outside. The frog is a common
green frog, *Rana clamitans*. From what I read male frogs have ears
that are significantly bigger then their eyes, female frogs have ears
the same side as their eyes; male frogs have yellowish under parts and
throats, and girls frogs have creamy white throats. Now, when I first
got my frog I was convinced it was a girl frog (the underside seems
white, and the ear was just a little bigger, you could say it was the
same size. BUT, my frog croaks, and the throat puffs out/extends with
the croaks! Does a female frog croak?
<Not usually, no. Croaking is for males to attract a mate. Males
also have a much larger ear drum, about twice the size of the eye, so
it should be pretty obvious.>
I understand that there are 6 different calls that this species of
frogs make, but do girls make croaking sounds? If I sent a picture of
the actual frog, could someone here tell me if it is a male or
female?
<Perhaps.>
I really want to know. The one book that has an actual picture of a
male and female has no caption with the picture to say WHICH is male or
female, mores the pity. It's in a semi-aquatic aquarium/vivarium
which is 20
gallons and has Zilla brand foam insert kit called "rain forest
rapids" kit. Also, I read somewhere on the internet to only feed
this kind of frog 3 times a week, what happens if a frog is over fed?
My frog eats a LOT.
<Yes they do.>
Like, last night it ate: about 9 pill bugs, a slug, about 6 worms, a
centipede, 2 spiders, and about 3 or 4 meal worms, a moth, and one
unidentified insect. Also, most of the food I go out and catch
outdoors, in this case, should I use the powder that contains
multivitamins that is sprinkled on foods for lizard and amphibians to
keep them from getting metabolic bone disease?
<Is well worth doing.>
Also, I am using just a daylight lamp from Exo Terra it says on the
package it is good for all amphibians. It is very hard to find any
information on frogs not generally found in the pet industry, I mean it
is easy to find out what you
have, but not specific husbandry for the frog like you could if you had
one common in pet stores. Could I have more than one of these frogs in
this tank?
<Generally, Rana species are kept singly in small tanks. They tend
to do only fairly well in captivity, and never really become tame.
They're quite nervous and prone to bashing their noses on the glass
as they jump about
when scared. You could certainly try keeping a pair in your tank, but
you'd have to keep an eye on them, and the problem is that after
spawning, should they do so, the male would likely harass the female.
If the female goes off
her food, that's a good sign of trouble.>
Thanks,
Penny
P.S: I use a lot of Seachem products in my aquariums, one is called
"Prime". It is a water conditioner, but I am wondering, could
this be dangerous to a frog? I know frogs can absorb water through its
skin and it cloaca, and this does have a harsh sulfur chemical
smell.
<This product should be safe.>
I also use the Seachem's version of live bacteria called
"Stability",
<Useless.>
and a carbon replacement for planted aquariums called "Flourish
Excel" and also Seachem's "Flourish Iron" Iron
supplement for planted tanks, and the general plant supplement from
Seachem caller "Flourish". Would these
products harm my frog?
<Shouldn't do so, no.>
I did use the live bacteria product-no ill effects yet. I have live
plants in this tank in the water section- water sprite floating and
java fern on the bottom. Could I use the water conditioner and the
plant fertilizers?
<Should be able to, but if in doubt, consult with the manufacturer.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Most likely the wrong forum, but am going to ask anyway... where
does this go? 8/4/10
Oh, my Gosh! Seachem fooled me good to the tune of $41.00
American!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
<Could be worse. Those poor folks in Pakistan have just had their
homes washed away in floods. Always good to have a sense of
perspective.>
From now on I will ask someone here if what I am buying is a crock of
poop before I chuck my bucks around at aquarium store.
<By all means do so.>
Seachem has a nice website, and explains why the products are so
good.
<And they are. But you do need to understand what products do, and
like all businesses, they tend to promise a little more than their
products actually deliver. Coca Cola doesn't make me sexy, and
eating Bran Flakes doesn't
imbue me with glowing sense of happiness.>
Last time I went to the aquarium store I purchased $120.00 dollars
worth of products from Seachem (This was for 3 items!!!!!!!!) Now I
feel like a fool.
<Please don't feel foolish. Two of the three products you bought
are good ones, among the best in their niches. The one product I'm
not wild about is Seachem Stability, and that's only because most
of these "good bacteria"
products are unreliable and, once the aquarium is more than half
mature, don't provide any benefits whatsoever. They don't do
any harm, but these bacteria potions often don't do any good
either.>
Thanks for helping me with my frog. It is getting
bigger, and the ear is getting bigger so it must be a boy frog. But it
was much smaller first and the ear was the same size as the eye so I
was fooled there, too.
<If it makes you feel any better, frogs are pretty bad at telling
their sexes at times. If you watch them in the wild you'll see
every possible permutation of male and female frog you can
imagine!>
Pen
<Have fun with your frogs! Cheers, Neale.>
Thank you for your fabulous web site...and... (Bombina
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 (Bombina 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... (Bombina 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.>
Leopard Frog, hlth. 1/26/08 To whom it may concern, My
son has a Leopard frog, which he has had for about a year now. He has
had it since it was a tadpole. His first grade class was giving some
away. <Progressive. Good for them> Anyway, after about 6 months,
he became kind of sluggish, and started to have difficulty catching the
live crickets we feed him. I just figured it was due to the winter
months and him just feeling like hibernating. <Could well be>
Next, as time went on, on occasion, I noticed that when he tried to
move, he would start twitching, and could not move, until the twitching
stopped. He is still eating, but the condition seems to be getting
worse, and he is getting weaker. My son is extremely distressed about
his pet. Any ideas? We do turn on a light / heat lamp for him each day,
for anywhere from 2-6 hours. Thanks, Brian <Mmm, could be simply
"age"... and likely influences of captivity. Exposure to
sanitizers in your source water, treatment... How is new water
prepared, system water filtered, tested?... Perhaps a deficiency
syndrome nutritionally... Do you supplement the food/s at all? Please
read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/amphibdisfaqs.htm
and the other Amphibian files linked above... to grant you insight,
raise questions here. Bob Fenner>
Re: Leopard Frog 1/26/08 The frog is only about a year old,
<Mmm, well, Rana pipiens is relatively long-lived for an amphibian
(up to about nine years), but generally only a year or two in
captivity... due to vagaries of water quality, nutrition...> and his
little water "dish/pool" is filled with bottled water only.
<... "Bottled water" may not be a good idea... what are
the chemical qualities of this product?> His diet consists of live
crickets, nothing else. <Need more...> His tank has the moist
coconut medium in the bottom. Brian <Do take the time to read on the
Net re this species husbandry... You read as a conscientious keeper,
but am sensing the same issues hinted at as in our previous
correspondence. BobF>
Re: Leopard Frog 1/31/08 Can you give some examples / manufacturers
of calcium supplements and vitamin supplements for frogs? I found
"JurassiCal" for a calcium supplement (says ok for
amphibians), but I haven't found a vitamin supplement yet. Thanks,
Brian <Ah, yes. Baby/children's liquid vitamins are fine here,
as are commercial aquarium products like Selcon, MicroVit...
BobF>
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>
Feeding Aquatic/Terrestrial Frogs 1/28/07 A work
related friend asked me a question concerning two frogs his young
daughter bought from Wal-Mart or some place like that. They
will not eat, and of course Wal-Mart has no suggestions. All she
knows is that they are white with black polka dots. I know little
or nothing about frogs, except how to catch tadpoles with a
jar:):) Any help would be appreciated. <Most frogs only eat
like moving prey. Offer some like black worms and I am sure they will
gobble them up. Get some from a fish store and rinse them very well.
Get some tweezers or feeding tongs and place a small clump of worms in
front of their mouth. If they are terrestrial frogs then they will go
after live insects like crickets and mealworms.-Chuck>
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)>
Food For Tadpoles 5/31/06 Can you
tell me how long it takes for a tadpole to become a frog and what I
would feed the little fellows? I tried fish food...they all
died but one. How about Hermit Crab food? Any
other tips? I think this would be a great learning
experience for my little girl. PS...thanks for your advice on the
Hermits and Turtles....all are alive and well! God Bless You!
<Tadpoles eat algae. The higher the water temp. the quicker they
transform. Feed them Spirulina flakes and keep them at room temperature
and they should transform into little frogs/toads in 4 to 6 weeks. Frog
tadpoles are green, toad tadpoles are black, at least around here in
CA.-Chuck>
Feeding Frogs Hi! I have brought inside a tame 3-inch
(northern leopard?) frog who has been living in our
outdoor prefab pond this summer, because the pond is only 15
inches deep and could freeze to the bottom. (Our attached
garage is too warm for hibernation.) He and his "little
brother," about the size of my thumb, are probably from the pet
store tadpoles I added in the spring but I'm not sure. I got 500
earthworms through the mail to tide us through the winter (but
that's another story...). <That's a lot of worms, my fish
are envious.> Although the frogs readily take worms from
my fingers, I'd like to devise a self-feeding
system. Can you advise me of a good way of dispensing
earthworms? <Boy, I wish I knew, I know with feeding blood worms to
aquarium fish they make a small mesh cone that the worms will wriggle
out of for the fish to munch, but I am not sure about earth worms, I
guess I have not spent enough time with them. Something
similar would be sure to drop a bunch of dirt into your tank, and whose
to say that they will even wriggle out?> Presently the frogs are in
an aquarium with water 6.5 inches deep above 1.5 inches of pebbles,
with 3 large rocks protruding above the water. When I
place a worm in a dish on the rocks, it usually slithers out of the
dish, across the rock and into the water and pebbles before either frog
makes a move! <I have the same problem with my sand fish skinks and
wax worms.> I'm considering converting one end of the tank to
"land" but am uncertain what substrate to use in it-- gravel
would be the tidiest, but damp sphagnum moss more apt to keep the worm
escapees out of the water. But the most important question
is, won't the worms simply continue to elude the frogs as they
leave the dish and bury themselves in the substrate? <I'd go
with gravel with moss on top. The frogs will probably get
the worms, but it would not surprise me in the slightest if some
escape, dig, die, and foul your water.> I know frogs are commonly
raised in captivity as lab animals and am sure someone has come up with
a better idea than hand-feeding. How do they do
it?? Thanks for your suggestions! <I am afraid I do not
know of any automated ways to feed them. I am sure if any of
our daily readers have a plan they will let us know and we will post on
the daily FAQS (Anybody?). You can also mix some crickets
into their diet if you have a local supply, they do not dig, and it is
easy to remove the un eaten ones. Best of Luck, Gage>
Peg
Toad, frog questions Hi, I'm raising wild bull frogs in a
fish tank. I would like to know if this will harm them in the winter
and also what foods do they eat?. < Bull frogs are carnivorous and
will eat just about anything they can get into their mouths including
other frogs. You Firebelly toads are probably poisonous to the bull
frog if he tries and eat them. Your frog will be fine in your aquarium
but may require a hibernation or cool down period if you want them to
breed in the spring.> I've been feeding them crickets, mealworms
and also regular worms. Is this ok for all of them? < It all sounds
good.> I'm also raising a water frog in the same
tank and 2 Firebelly toads. Do they all eat the same things as a
Firebelly toad and will the Firebelly toads cause them harm? <They
should all eat all the same things if they can fit it into
their mouths.-Chuck>
Thank
You,
Gail
FAT TOAD - Time to Start Using Capitalization! Hi. I know
I'm concerned with Jeff most of the time, but there are a lot of
questions I have. Well, as much as I hate to admit it, Jeff is kind of
fat. How do I safely slim him down? < The key is to make him work
harder for less food. Just like we are told to eat less and exercise.
Feed the tank smaller crickets a few times a day instead of dumping in
a whole mess all at once. Toss in a couple small crickets before school
and a couple when you get home from school. Any that make it through
the day will come out a night when Jeff is out and
about.-Chuck> <It is at this point that I will admonish
you for continually sending in emails without using any capitalization
whatsoever. While we are happy to answer your questions, we are
not happy to retype your queries. Marina>