FAQs About African Dwarf Frogs,
Reproduction
Related Articles: Keeping African Clawed Frogs and African
Dwarf Frogs by Neale Monks, African Dwarf Frogs, Amphibians, Turtles,
Related FAQs: Dwarf African Frogs
1, Dwarf
African Frogs 2, ADF
Identification, ADF Behavior,
ADF Compatibility, ADF Selection, ADF
Systems, ADF Feeding, ADF Disease, & FAQs on: Amphibians 1, Amphibians 2, Frogs Other Than African and Clawed,
African Clawed Frogs, Turtles, Amphibian Identification, Amphibian Behavior, Amphibian Compatibility, Amphibian Selection, Amphibian Systems, Amphibian Feeding, Amphibian Disease, Amphibian Reproduction,
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Need... to be making small food animals...
"green water", "infusoria"... ahead of
hatching... Frequent water changes... gentle (sponge, open-box)
filtration... |
ADF Tadpoles 4/22/20
Hi Neale,
<Hanna,>
I am the worrywart who wrote to you about the lack of amplexus in my ADF
couple, which was clearly unwarranted concern, as a week or two ago,
they began doing exactly that.
<Yay!>
The male sings every night (and sometimes during the day too), and they
are seen engaging in amplexus almost every single day.
<Do bear in mind this is exhausting for the female. If you have one,
isolating the male for a few days in a breeding trap to allow her to
recover and feed leisurely would be welcome.>
There have been many clutches of eggs, the majority of which unfertile,
but two days ago, I found two tadpoles in their tank.
<Double yay!>
I had just previously completed a 50% water change, so I am guessing
much of the tadpoles were lost as a result of this, but I wanted to save
the two that I discovered left. They are currently in a floating
container in the tank with their parents, and are two days (at my best
guess) old. I know there is a huge ADF tadpole mortality rate (around
80%), but I would still like to try to keep these little guys alive!
<Understandable. Rearing baby amphibians (i.e., tadpoles) is mostly
about feeding them and/or preventing cannibalisation, which is quite
common in some species. In the case of ADFs, feeding is the main
challenge.>
I do not have liquifry, will I need to purchase this?
<No. What you need are small live foods. Microworms, brine shrimps,
Cyclops and Daphnia are the classic options. So long as you can get to a
clean pond somewhere, collecting a starter culture of these shouldn't be
too hard. Indeed, if you have a garden pond, you may well have enough to
keep you
going! Brine shrimps and microworms can easily be reared at home, though
you do need a few days to get them up and running.>
They are fairly active for being so fresh, and I put the tiniest pinch
of fish food into their container in the hopes that perhaps they would
be able to digest this is they were older than I suspected.
<They will almost certainly not eat flake or powder foods, since they
really only snap at moving things.>
Would you be able to give me any advice, or direct me to a page on
tadpole rearing for ADFs?
<Oh, definitely visit https://www.caudata.org and sign up to their
forum.
You will get good advice from those folks!>
Thank you so much, and hope you are staying safe! Best, Hanna
<And likewise to you, too. Neale.>
Re: ADF Tadpoles
Hi Neale,As always thank you so much for the incredibly prompt response!
<Welcome.>
As luck would have it, I have a creek in my backyard, and on my back
porch I actually have a few tanks full of spring peeper tadpoles. Per
your instructions, I used an eyedropper and selected about 6-10 tiny
micro-organisms that were swimming enthusiastically from these tanks (of
creek water), but small enough for the ADF tadpoles to eat.
<Can't imagine why this wouldn't work, but oftentimes best to pretty
much fill the tank with swimming plankton, since the tadpoles don't
really forage so much as wait for food to swim into range. Some
experimentation may be necessary, perhaps using a plastic dropper (like
a disposable pipette) to place food items close to the tadpoles. I rear
Axolotl fry periodically, and they need daphnia for the first few days
at least, and after a week or two, seem to graduate onto frozen
bloodworms without much
fuss. They are much bigger though, so I'd expect ADF tadpoles to need
the plankton for much longer.>
I hope this is alright, as I have not yet had the chance to peruse the
link you kindly sent me. If i continue this process every day for the
tadpoles until they are big enough to consume other things, will this
work?
<Should do. As with rearing any small newborns, the key is "small but
often" meals. Fish breeders often feed 6-8 times a day, replacing a bit
of the water each day as well, just to keep the conditions sweet..>
Thank you! Best,Hanna
<Most welcome.>
ADF Behavior, & repro. f'
3/29/20
Hello again Neale,
<Hello Hanna,>
I wrote to you perhaps around a week ago about my female ADF with
cloudy eyes.
<Indeed.>
I followed your instructions, and she is almost entirely back to
normal, and all tank mates are happy and healthy!
<Yay!>
However, perhaps I am making a problem out of nothing, but I had
another concern I thought you would be best to ask you about.
<Sure.>
I've searched for any answers about this by scouring the internet
but I did not find the information I was looking for. My ADFs are
one male and one female, and as previously mentioned in another
email I have had them for about 2 months. When I first got them from
the pet store they were extremely small and underfed, so much so
that they were almost translucent.
They have grown immensely in the two months I have had them, almost
doubling in size.
<Not bad at all!>
The male developed his subdermal glands, and the female has clearly
began to develop her more rotund and pear-shaped body. I would wager
a guess that they are around the ages of 5-6 months each but it's
hard to say.
<Maybe, but hard to know, as you say.>
However, they have not shown any inclination towards amplexus with
each other.
<May simply be too young, or even of different species (there are at
least two in the trade) so not willing or able to sexually engage
with one another. On top of this, these animals are largely
nocturnal, so we really only see a bit of their behaviour in the
tank when the lights are on.>
I contacted a few other ADF owners, who shared that their little
guys started breeding almost right away and took to each other
quickly and a very young age. Perhaps my frogs are simply still not
ready, as I know the average age of sexual maturity for these guys
is 9 months, but I was curious nonetheless.
<Often people hear the males singing first. Sounds like a squeaky
door to me, but apparently female frogs love it!>
My two have never shown any inclination towards amplexus, and I
wanted to make sure that this wasn't a sign that something was
wrong.
<Unlikely.>
Do some ADFs simply never choose to breed with each other?
<Indeed, just as with people.>
Are mine still too young?
<Quite possibly.>
There is obviously no need for them to breed, but I know that
amplexus is often a sign of a healthy and happy environment for
ADFs, and I became worried that I was doing something wrong.
<I'd not worry about this. If they're feeding and active during the
daylight hours, those are the two best signs.>
Thank you for all your helpful answers and care!
Best, Hanna
<Most welcome. Neale.>
Question about female ADF, repro. 9/2/19
Hello, I think my female African dwarf frog MAY have eggs. Are there any signs
that she has eggs and if she is about to lay them,
<Gravid females will be noticeably plumper around the abdomen. But we aware that
overeating and even Dropsy can look similar.>
what should I expect?
<Not much. African Dwarf Frogs routinely lay eggs in aquaria, but the tadpoles
are tiny, and either get eaten by other animals in the tank (including the
frogs) or fail to find enough to eat. If you want to breed
them, here's a good summary:
http://www.hylid.clara.co.uk/hymenochirus/breeding_hymenochirus.htm
The main challenge is ensuring you remove the eggs to a safe aquarium, and then
once hatched, supply suitable microscopic food (called infusoria) for the first
few days. If you've bred egg-laying fish with small fry, such as Bettas, you'll
know the process, and it's pretty similar.>
Thank you for your help!
<Welcome. Neale.>
About African dwarf frogs and eggs; repro.
12/7/17
So my Male African dwarf must of just turned 9-12 months old and now it
is mating with my 3 year old female.
<Cool!>
The have been mating for many days now.
<What happens. Sometimes you even hear the males croak.>
For awhile they only laid 4 eggs 2 were fertile but died. This morning I
looked in my tank and there’s prob about 500 eggs are they all fertile
if so how can you tell if they are?
<By looking, really the only approach is to wait and observe -- after a
day or two, infertile eggs (or at least non-fertilised eggs) will go
cloudy, and eventually rot. A good approach is to remove most of the
eggs to something like a floating breeding trap, so you can see them
more easily. Plastic turkey basters are great for this. As the days
pass, remove any cloudy eggs. Methylene blue is the tried-and-trusted
medication for preventing fungus spreading onto healthy eggs if you need
to optimise your chances of getting big numbers of tadpoles. Cheers,
Neale.>
African Dwarf Frog; beh., repro.
6/10/17
Hello! First of all, great site and great information.
<Thanks!>
I have 2 adfs in a 5 gallon filtered tank with 1 male Betta. Jet (the
Betta) seems to be fine with them and they with him. We are still trying
to determine the sex of each frog.
<Agreed, difficult to do, but you can find photos online. Males do tend
to be smaller and more angular, while females are bigger and chubbier,
and have a tail-like thing between their legs out of which the eggs
emerge.>
The frogs were purchased together, and the pet store was a local mom and
pop shop that had just received their shipment of adfs that morning. One
adf is very active. Rarely hides, loves his reflection, loves to float,
swim to Top but mostly hangs at bottom and be active. The other loves to
be lazy, hide in its cave and be by itself but does come out sometimes.
Note: they were separated for first night before placed together. They
both seemed to be inactive and just adjusting.
<I wouldn't worry about variation in behaviour too much, provided all
are feeding. Like humans, some frogs are shy, some are more outgoing.>
Once they were together in Betta tank, the active one came to life
personality/behavior wise, the other stayed less active. The two do
interact on occasion, and they do ear together. The Betta will swim at
top and bottom. He will swim by them or peek and see what they are doing
but doesn't aggress on them and they don't seem to interact with him
either.
They will freeze him out or just keep doing what they are doing. All
seems well.
<Indeed. Had a question about Bettas and frogs yesterday, and what I'll
say is this: while they can work, and are a better combo than most
frog/fish match-ups, it's still important to ensure the frogs can feed
easily. Both Bettas and frogs dislike strong water currents and need
warmth, so a gently-filtered, heated aquarium suits them both. On the
other hand, the frogs are slower feeders, and because they're air
breathers, they do need a clear run up to the surface or they'll drown.
Bettas sometimes become hostile to them, so floating plants are useful
for providing shade and shelter, making it easier for the frogs to
clamber to the top, rest a while, and then slip down to the bottom
without attracting too much attention. Indian Fern is a good choice for
this.>
However , yesterday I noticed that the frog that is less active likes to
hang out near top of tank, up near filter, with half his body out of
water, half in water.
<Not unusual. Contrary to what many suppose, ADFs will bask at the
surface, even half-clambering out on top of floating plants if they
can.>
One leg balanced against filter, one in water. He seems to go there
somewhat often. I found him a short bit ago actually hiding between
heater and filter Cover, under the water then head out of water...but at
top and head out of the water a lot none the less.
<They are air-breathers, and as I said before, need an easy way to get
to the top and rest awhile. If the current is too strong, or the depth
of the tank is too much, they'll find ways to "perch" closer to the
surface. Bear in mind they're happiest where the water is no more than
20 cm/8 inches deep, and air-powered filtration is a much better bet
than all but the smallest internal electric filters.>
As I work during the day I can't tell you how long he stayed/stays there
but I saw him there this morning. He went to the bottom before I left
and at some point in 12 hours went back up. I thought they stayed in
water for long hours. Water test results from 6 in 1 test strips are
listed below.
we test water with strips weekly as we have the Betta (he's high
maintenance believe it or not) and he only seems to do well with water
between 78 and 80). Water temp. as of this email is 78. we have an
aquarium heater. we live in new England, our weather is bi polar to say
the least so we decided to be prepared as this our first attempt at fish
parenthood.
<Understood.>
Right now due to filter I do water changes roughly every three to four
weeks provided tests read ok but wonder if now that I have frogs (they
only moved in a week ago) if I should change it more often. Water test
results as of this email:
Nitrate: safe (20-40) Nitrite: 0 (none)
<All good.>
Total hardness: borderline (50-150) water stays on line...
<Fine.>
Total chlorine: 0 (none) Total alkalinity : 40-80 low to moderate PH:
7.4 to 7.8 (neutral to alkaline) - the color/line is very difficult to
distinguish the cross over but its definitely on the line of the 7.2 to
7.8 range
<Fine.>
They are eating well too. Once I put the food in front of them they eat
immediately. One on each side of cube. They go nuts for their food. We
will worm on hand feeding later once I know frogs are OK on normal
feeding schedule, and we get thru this bump. We also make sure that the
Betta is in a breeding net so that they can eat in peace, the Betta can
stay in his tank and then the Betta gets a treat as reward in hopes this
will train him to get accustomed to this routine. Right now I use kabob
sticks to put the tube flex worms On, hold in front of the frogs and
they immediately eat. Its the only food they have eaten quickly and
responded to at all. I feed them once every other day
<Provided they're feeding, and they're able to rest at the top of the
tank in comfort, chances are your African Dwarf Frogs are fine. Warning
signs of trouble include loss of weight (i.e., not getting enough to
eat) and the
appearance of red or pink patches on the skin (bacterial infections).>
I'm sorry I could not provide more information but any thoughts or
knowledge you have would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you in advance.
Sincerely
Victoria
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
African dwarf frog help please
5/26/17
Hello,
<Hello!>
I've spent quite a few hours reading over your information and questions
regarding African dwarf frogs, but nothing seems to be quite the answer
I needed. I have three ADFs living in a 5.5 gallon aquarium with one
Betta.
It is filtered and heated to 80 degrees.
<Sounds good.>
Recently I caught my male "hugging" one of my females about 36 hour s
ago.
<Amplexus.>
He held on for about 3 hours, and she laid 4 eggs (which were apparently
not fertilized).
<Quite possibly.>
Ever since then, she has not eaten, and has a bump on her back, which is
right above her tailbone, and is pointy in shape rather then round and
soft.
<The bump may well be a result of Amplexus. Post-mating, female frogs
can/do become relatively inactive.>
Until this morning her vulva appeared very swollen. For several hour
after he let her go she would go upside down at the surface and hip
thrust at the air, like she did when he was attached, but that behavior
has stopped. The other two frogs and Betta seem to be doing fine, with
ph at 7.6, no ammonia or nitrites. I feed a variety of frozen thawed
bloodworms, Mysis, and brine shrimp, and I've no doubt they occasionally
steal some Betta pellets.
She is also hanging around the heater at the top of the aquarium much
more then usual. I'm very worried about her. Since the issues I've done
3 50% water changes, and I use Prime each time. Any help would be
greatly appreciated.
<This is one of those times where "wait and see" is the best advice, in
the short term anyways. Separating the female, for example in a floating
breeding trap, isn't a bad idea, but keep the trap not-too-close to the
heater or light otherwise there's a risk she'll overheat and suffocate.
If she isn't perking up within the next day or two, write back and we'll
think some more. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: African dwarf frog help please
5/27/17
Thank you so much for your fast response! It's reassuring to know they
can be inactive after Amplexus, and that I've got someone knowledgeable
to give advice. I'll wait and see and hope she gets better soon. The
male grabbed
the other female right as I am writing this, but he let go quickly. I'd
love to have some tadpoles, but not at the risk of my females lives.
<Understood. Adding fluffy plants (whether real or fake) such as Java
Moss can go a long way towards creating safe spaces for eggs and
tadpoles.
Surprisingly, people do sometimes find a few survive long enough to be
removed (for example with a turkey baster) into a floating breeding
trap, and raised in there. Breeding dwarf African frogs is done, and
many reports are online for your perusal.>
Thanks again!
<Welcome. Neale.>
Re: African dwarf frog help please 5/27/17
Thank you so much for your fast response! It's reassuring to know they
can be inactive after Amplexus, and that I've got someone knowledgeable
to give advice. I'll wait and see and hope she gets better soon. The
male grabbed
the other female right as I am writing this, but he let go quickly. I'd
love to have some tadpoles, but not at the risk of my females lives.
<Understood. Adding fluffy plants (whether real or fake) such as Java
Moss can go a long way towards creating safe spaces for eggs and
tadpoles.
Surprisingly, people do sometimes find a few survive long enough to be
removed (for example with a turkey baster) into a floating breeding
trap, and raised in there. Breeding dwarf African frogs is done, and
many reports are online for your perusal.>
Thanks again!
<Welcome. Neale.>
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re: African dwarf frog help please
5/30/17
Hello,
Thank you again for the advice and information. She finally started eating
again, although her appetite isn't quite what it used to be, it seems to be
improving daily. I am very grateful for what you guys do, good
information is such a valuable resource and you offer it for free, saving
countless lives.
<Good to hear things are on the up, and thanks for the kind words. Cheers,
Neale.>
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African dwarf frog help 8/8/16
I have Googled and read for hours and cant find my answer anywhere so I
thot I would ask.
<Fire away!>
I have 2 ADF I believe male and female he gets on her back often but she
never swims around except what looks like her trying to get him off and
usually last about 30 min.
<It could easily be she doesn't want to mate. Do listen out for the
quiet croaking these frogs make when mating. That's often a good sign
that the male is serious about reproduction. As for the female, you may
see her swell up with eggs and then almost overnight seem like all that
body mass has gone. In reality though what tends to happen is African
Dwarf Frogs mate freely, but the eggs are lost to the filter or the
tadpoles fail to thrive through lack of food. In other words, you can
reasonably expect mixed sex groups to be laying eggs, the tricky part is
finding the eggs and removing them for careful rearing. The tadpoles are
small, need suitably small foods, and run the risk of being consumed by
other frogs (or fish) in the aquarium with them.>
She never goes to the top is this considered mating. I have never seen
eggs and wasn't sure if she is just not mature yet or what was going on
with them?
<African Dwarf Frogs are usually sold at more-or-less adult sizes, so
assuming they're eating well and putting on weight, you can assume
they'll reproduce within months if not weeks of introduction if
environmental conditions are appropriate.>
Will she deffinatly swim to surface to lay the eggs if so why had she
not layer any eggs or moved to the surface?
<"Definitely" is a bit adamant for this sort of question! While some
frogs do like to bask at the surface, others do not. Spawning normally
happens among floating plants or bushy plants (such as Java moss) at the
bottom.>
How do I know when she has reached maturity? Thank u for your time.
<Hope this helps, Neale.>
Raising eggs of dwarf African aquatic frogs
11/25/15
Hello there!
<Hello Sheena,>
I have a pair of frogs who seem to be doing great. They always mate after I have
done a water change. For the first time that I have seen, some eggs were
produced! I noticed one yesterday, attached to the 'moss ball'.
<Yes.>
I quickly took an old beta container that my beta
<Betta, rhymes with "better", not "beater".>
had come from the store in, and filled it with water right from the tank.
In went the moss ball and egg. In went 2 pellets of ZooMed brand; Aquatic frog &
tadpole food.
It has been sitting under a lamp since 9:30 last evening, maintaining a
temperature of 78-80. This morning I am noticing a lot of squirming going on
inside that egg, and a definite form of a tadpole! Wow, that thing is super
tiny!
<Correct.>
So, upon further investigation, I found another egg in my frog tank! Into the
incubation tank it went as well. But, do they lay eggs in batches or singular?
Do they lay eggs multiple days in a row?
<Usually singly or in small groups. Not the big clumps we associated with many
pond-dwelling frogs in the temperate zone. When they hatch you'll be presented
with tiny tadpoles that need very small live foods (infusoria) or, with luck,
egg-layer fish foods (Liquifry for example). Do note these pollute the tank
quickly, and you need to feed "often but in small amounts"
as with baby fish, 4-6 meals per day, removing uneaten food, and keeping water
quality good. Very challenging without proper filtration!>
I do not have a filter system, or a heater in my frog tank.
<Really does need warmth at least, and some gentle filtration (air powered
sponge for example) will be essential unless you're doing daily water changes.
Let me direct you to some reading to save me typing everything out again:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/hymenochirus.htm
Various links at top, including for care and reproduction.>
I change the tank once a month. This involves removing approx. 1-1 1/2 cups of
water (in which my frogs are housed).
<Doesn't sound enough to me.>
I then dump all water, vigorously rub the inside out of the tanks walls clean
with my hands, rinse the gravel several times, and then refill tank with tap
water which to touch is slightly warmer than the water with the frogs.
<Please do read the above linked articles.>
In goes a teaspoon or so of Betta bowl plus water conditioner, the frogs and old
water. So far everything has been great, and the frogs seem happy and healthy.
But do I need to be stricter with the incubation bowls water changes?
<Yes; do read some more. This approach won't work indefinitely. These are
tropical animals and need appropriate care. Unfortunately they're often sold in
the same way as Bettas, as being viable pets for unheated, unfiltered bowls.
They aren't, any more than Bettas are, and both will die sooner rather than
later when kept in unfiltered, room-temperature water of too-small volume.
Cheers, Neale.>
African Dwarf Frog Tank Slime & Mating
11/19/15
Hi. First of all, thank you for keeping so much information on this website. I
am new to fish and aquatic frog keeping, and the information I have found on
this site has been tremendously helpful.
<Thanks for the kind words.>
I have 4 African dwarf frogs (1 male and 3 females) in a 3.5 gallon tank. I
realize this tank is too small, and I plan to move them to a 10 gallon tank once
that tank is cycled.
<Cool.>
My male is in a frisky mood quite often, so he spends a lot of time mating (or
attempting to mate) with the females.
<What they do, when well kept. So promising.>
Sometimes this mating results in eggs and other goo resting in random spots in
the tank, but often a white, dusty yet slimy looking film is left behind on the
plants and the heater. I have attached pictures of it to this email.
I know that eggs that don't hatch can turn into fungus,
<Yes.>
so it is important to remove them from the tank, and I try my best to do so with
a turkey baster.
<Less important the bigger the tank, but in a small aquarium, yes indeed, well
worth doing.>
Regardless, it seems like I can't get rid of this slimy white film. I am able to
wash it off of the plastic plants, but it comes back within 24 hours.
<Likely bacterial; common in small tanks with less the optimal water quality.
Specifically: sluggish water movement, medium to high nitrate levels, and
insufficient filtration. Bacteria grow on surfaces with lots of organic matter.
Bacteria grow ridiculously quickly where conditions suit them.>
Even the mystery snail in the tank has this film on its shell. So my questions
are: Is this film a byproduct of mating or something else? Is this film coating
my tank because the filter is not working properly?
<Some combination of these. Uneaten food, faeces, decaying eggs... all excellent
resources for bacteria. Stronger filtration will remove, bigger volumes will
dilute.>
Should I keep up my efforts to remove it from the tank or should I leave it
alone even though it looks nasty?
<Generally harmless in itself, but the conditions that promote them aren't
ideal.>
I know that it isn't good to remove beneficial bacteria from the tank, but I
can't tell if this is beneficial or harmful slime. If this film is a fungus,
mold, or algae, how do I get rid of it? Thank you for your time!
<Suspect switching up to an 8 or 10 gallon tank will see your problems melt
away, assuming adequate filtration.
Cheers, Neale.>
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ADF Strange mating behavior
8/22/13
I have two ADF's in a 2.5gallon heated, filtered tank. I have had them
since May.
They both sing
<?! Are these Hymenochirus? Males do hum/buzz to attract females; but
are rarely heard by aquarists>
every night and have what appear to be white pimples in their armpits,
which led me to believe they were both males.
For about a week the have been "mating" constantly but for short periods
of time. There have been no eggs as a result. a couple of nights ago I
saw them "mating" and the "female" seemed to be doing all she could to
remove the other frog. I left them alone because I figured she would
dislodge him as she usually seems to. When I awoke that next morning,
they had not eaten any of the food from their bowl (this is weird for
them). Last night the same thing happened and when I woke up, one pellet
out of 4 was gone (so SOMEONE ate) and they are STILL attached (they
usually seemed to always detach during the day which gave me peace of
mind that the "female" could get some rest).
Should I leave this alone or should I do something?
<I'd leave alone>
I'm still pretty sure both of the frogs are male, there has been no eggs
and they both sang like crazy until lately :( . I'm afraid the "female"
is eating but stressed and I'm afraid the horny male is simply not
eating (and also not going to the surface enough, it seems like only the
"female" gets her snout out of the water. Advice please!! :(
Thanks
Beth
<Mmm, I'd ask that you peruse our postings re the genus/species:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/hymenochirus.htm
the linked files above; and keep us posted re your observations,
speculations. Bob Fenner>
Follow up from Aug 22 question; ADF repro. f'
1/6/14
Hi. I sent in a question about my African Dwarf Frogs that wouldn't stop
mating. They have since stopped and have gone back to only. "Mating" for
short periods of time. They spend every evening buzzing and will buzz at
each other in weird short buzzes when it seems they are trying to mount
each other at the same time (it looks like a face off, Lol !) I have
upgraded to a 10gallon tank and added one more frog (3 total ) He joined
right in the mating and buzzing. It is a male as far as I can see
and I still have seen no eggs ( which leads me to believe I
have only males) but tons of mating behaviour. So in conclusion after
constant mating for a few days (and freaking me right out!) both frogs
came away alive and healthy and are still with me 5 months later.
Thanks !!
Beth
<Glad all worked out well in the end. Sounds as if they're happy little
frogs. Thanks for the update! Cheers, Neale.>
Please can you explain this! ADF Beh., repro.
4/28/14
Dear WWM
<Salve!>
I have had one female and one male ADF for over a year. They have
been getting on together no problems at all. Mate all the time
after a water change etc. All of a sudden today, one of them is
upside down not moving, with the other one holding on to it tightly with
its head in the other ones belly. It does look as if the one
underneath is dead and may be the other one is eating it!
This has really shocked me!
<I bet.>
Do you have an explanation at all.
<Of course it might be dead -- and you should know by now! But do be
aware that during mating ("amplexus") frogs will cling in all sorts of
odd positions. Sometimes so many males will climb on top of a female
they drown her, but that's not common (obviously, or frogs would have
died out by now!). In any case, prod the unmoving frog with something
small but not sharp, like a pencil end, and see if it reacts. If not,
either remove if you're sure it's dead, or else isolate in a net, away
from the other frogs, in the water, for a few hours to see if anything
happens. In the meantime, do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/FrogsArtNeale.htm
Check you're doing everything right, taking particular note to aquarium
size, filtration and temperature.>
Thank you
Yasmin
<Cheers, Neale.
Re: update... frog beh. ? 4/27/12
Further to my email below, the one frog has now let go of the other one
and they both appear fine again! I wonder if the male got hold of
the female the wrong way up!
<Quite possible. If you watch frogs mating in the wild, it's pretty wild
and doesn't seem at all pleasant for anyone involved!>
Never seen this happen before!
<Nor I. Cheers, Neale.>
Frogs stuck together 11/1/11
I have 2 African dwarf frogs about 3 years old. The smaller one keeps
getting his arms stuck in the gills of the larger one. It's like
he's getting a piggy back but he's in to his elbows in the
others gills. I have to pry them apart using the end of the fish net. I
don't think they are mating, why is this happening every 2 weeks or
so?
Libby
<Hello Libby. Adult frogs don't have gills, and tadpoles have
feathery external gills. So whatever else is happening here, it's
not a case of one frog's arms getting stuck in the other frog's
gills. Amplexus, the mating grip, does sound more likely. Cheers,
Neale.>
African Dwarf Frog Amplexus-Male at Wrong
End! 10/29/11
My male frog sometimes mounted the female at her head end, and grasped
her around the upper part of her body. They have sometimes mated
properly, and produced many tadpoles, which I am raising. Last week he
mounted her the wrong way, stayed on for hours at the bottom of the
tank, and prevented her
from going up for air often enough. She struggled, but could not get
free.
There was no way I could separate them; when he finally released her
she may have been injured in some way, and died soon after. Is this
behavior as odd as it seems?
Thanks,
Sheila
<Hello Sheila. Inept mating behaviours during amplexus are common
among frogs. It isn't common for the female to be unable to throw
off a misguided male, but I'm sure accidents like the one you saw
here happen from time to time. If you ever watch wild frogs mating,
it's insane! Not much advice I can give here, unfortunately. Good
luck rearing the tadpoles. Cheers, Neale.>
Dwarf Frog egg laying
2/25/11
I put a big shell in my tank last night and as soon as I did. My one
frog went in there and deposited something that looked to me like some
eggs or at least 1 egg. Then not too soon later it was not too much
later, it was either the same frog or the other one (they both look the
same) one bigger went in and deposited a brown substance. Can you
explain that for me ? I love your site.....Just could not find this
answer on there. Thanks Shirley
<Hello Shirley. African Dwarf Frogs do indeed lay their eggs
individually rather than in clumps. They are tiny -- tip of a needle
size -- specks, usually black in colour. You can't really see any
jelly around them. It's easy to confuse snail eggs with frog or
fish eggs if you aren't aware of the differences. Anyway, the
tadpoles are miniscule. ADFs spawn readily, but in most tanks
there's no sign of either eggs or tadpoles because other animals
eat them. Rearing the tadpoles is hard. You need excellent water
quality and suitable tiny foods, liquid fish fry food for example.
Cheers, Neale.>
Holy frog love!! 3/19/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
Woke up this morning to a completely cloudy frog tank full of
eggs and stringy stuff. Changed some water, rinsed the plants
everything looked good. Came home this afternoon to more of the
same-minus eggs. My frogs have been in the mood lately but I have
never seen anything like this!
<Yikes! Sounds like something's been going on in the
tank.>
I am assuming it is frog love potion, am I wrong?
<If you're seeing eggs, and the frogs otherwise seem
happy, then I wouldn't worry unduly. These frogs are
notoriously poor at producing fertile eggs, and much of what they
lay among the plants ends up rotting, and this could cause the
water to become cloudy, I suppose. Never actually seen that, so
I'm guessing. In any case, I'd change 50% of the water.
Hymenochirus spp. don't spawn all the time, but certain
things do trigger spawning, including sudden changes up or down.
So be sure the water you add is about as warm as the water
you've got in the tank.>
And, should I re-rinse everything or is it harmless to leave in
the tank.
My concern is that it is protein rich and will foul the
water.
<Would be my worry, too. Nothing harmed by taking out some
water, so what the heck, you may as well do that. I've no
idea why the water in your tank has gone cloudy, so a
precautionary approach would be wise.>
Sheesh, I'm blushing!
<Aw, shucks.>
Cheers,
Diana
Sent from my iPhone
<Sent from my MacBook Pro. Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
ADFs in their new tank with ... Tadpoles! -
4/1/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
My ADFs have moved back into their permanent tank. Nitrate and
ammonia are 0, pH at 7.4, temp 75-77. They seem happy, tank looks
great.
<Good to hear.>
Now that the frogs are no longer sharing the tank with Platies
should I buffer the water a bit and keep the pH closer to
7.0?
<No particular reason. Frogs are perfectly happy in hard,
basic water.
Don't forget that filter bacteria prefer hard, basic
conditions -- so any time you nudge away from that, towards more
acidic conditions, you diminish the effectiveness of the filter
bacteria. So if you have hard, basic water, leave things that
way.>
Also, eggs that were inadvertently moved from their temporary
tank (in the moss I supposed) have hatched and I have about 20-30
tadpoles.
<Cool!>
I am feeding them Spirulina flakes. Any chance they will survive
in the tank?
<I'm sure some will. Hymenochirus spp. frogs aren't
especially easy to breed, but more because the eggs tend to get
eaten or lost before they hatch. But once the eggs actually
hatch, the tadpoles themselves aren't especially difficult to
rear. There's a nice detailed summary over at Pipidae.org
(Pipidae being the family of frogs to which these belong).
Anyway, have a read:
http://davidcecere.pipidae.org/Breeding1.htm
You'll notice about halfway through he starts buffering the
water chemistry upwards, from soft to hard!>
Thanks Neale, I always appreciate you sound advice.
<Kind of you to say so. I look forward to seeing some
photos!>
Cheers,
Diana
<Happy Easter, Neale.>
Sent from my iPhone
<But surely an iPad before too long! Cheers, Neale.>
Tadpoles!! - 4/1/10
This is the proud mother-Princess Tianna. The dad, Prince Naveen
was feeling camera shy.
Diana
<Very handsome frog! Looks a nice tank, too.>
Tadpoles part 2 - 4/1/10
And here are the happy babies. Teeny tiny little things.
<But oh so many of them!>
I am not sure I have much hope that they will make it to
adulthood, but fun none the less.
<Often some will die for one reason or another, but passing on
African Dwarf Frogs to pet shops and other hobbyists
shouldn't be too difficult.>
I will keep you posted on our progress.
<Great!>
Happy Easter.
<And to you.>
Cheers,
Diana
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Re: Tadpoles part 2 4/5/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
I am down to about 15 little guys happily swimming around in my
tank.
<Very good! As I said, there's a certain attrition rate
that happens under the best of circumstances.>
I am feeding them powdered fish food made for baby fish. I cant
tell if they are eating it or not, but figure I have a better
chance with that than the Spirulina.
<Perhaps. I'd also try hard-boiled egg yolk and/or
Liquifry baby fish food.>
Other than that I am just keeping the water fresh and at about
77-80 degrees.
<Good.>
Because I have been spending so much time with my nose plastered
to the side of the tank observing the tiny little tad poles I
have noticed something else mysterious...or perhaps not. Swarming
just above the sand are tiny little white organisms that look
like itty bitsy bugs.
<Copepods if really tiny, Ostracods if salt-grain size.
Copepods often seem to whirl about, while Ostracods have a more
jerky motion.>
They are so small that I can't even tell if they have legs or
not. They look almost like dust particles but are most definitely
something else as they are concentrated directly above the
surface of the sand and seem to flit around in tight little
circles.
<Indeed.>
They do not float freely about the tank rather stay concentrated
at the bottom very close to the substrate. Any idea what these
miniscule creatures may be? Perhaps the tadpoles are feeding on
them?
<Not yet, but likely when they get bigger, yes, the tadpoles
may eat them.
Newly hatched tadpoles tend to feed on algae.>
Thanks and enjoy your day, Diana
<Pretty exhausting cross-country railway trip, but happy to be
back home!>
Sent from my iPhone (but wish it were an iPad!!)
<Surely just a matter of time. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tadpoles part 2 4/9/2010
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
One by one my tadpoles have disappeared. There was one lone
little pollywog left yesterday but alas today he is gone,
<Sounds like an Agatha Christie mystery.>
I am not sure if their parents ate them or if they just died - or
a combination of the two.
<Very likely eaten. I though the tadpoles were in their own
aquarium. I guess not.>
It was an interesting experiment and I was hoping I would get a
little frog or two out of it. Oh well, maybe I'll have better
luck next time.
<Indeed!>
Enjoy your weekend,
Diana
<Enjoy yours, too. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tadpoles part 2 4/9/2010
If my frogs find themselves in the family way again I may get one
of those little side hanging contraptions that go in the tank to
keep them separate. That might give the little buggers a better
chance.
Diana
<Sounds like a good investment to me. While they're
useless for trapping pregnant females, they're very useful
for corralling fry and tadpoles. I have one with a dozen 6-week
old halfbeaks in it. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Re: My Amano? Back to chatting re Hymenochirus repro.
4/19/10
Dear Neale,
<Diana,>
Good Lord - I have a bunch of tadpoles again!
<Cool!>
It seems that while I have no luck with keeping fish I appear to
have the perfect environment for frogs.
<Seems that way, doesn't it...?>
The tadpoles are very young and not swimming much yet. They are
mostly clustered together in a rear corner of the tank under the
java fern or stuck to the side of the tank.
<Yep.>
So, I am off to the store to get one of those plastic things that
hang into the tank. My question is this...how do I go about
collecting the tots and getting them into their quarantine
container?
<Well, you could use a net to drive them into a plastic
container, and then pour the water in that container into the
breeding net.>
Thanks and have a lovely evening,
D
<You too.>
PS I have added 3 Bee shrimp to the tank. They are lovely little
orange and while striped fellows. Everyone is getting along and
cleaning away!
Amano has recently molted but is back in action without missing a
step.
<Yes, quite charming little animals to be sure. Cheers,
Neale.>
Tadpole nursery 4/23/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
I purchased one of those nets for fry but my tank is too small to
accommodate the thing so I improvised-and came up with a rather
nifty idea.
<Oh...?>
I took the tea strainer from a small tea pot and tied it to the
side of the tank.
<Neat! The only risk with metallic things is corrosion, since
rust can be toxic to fish. Stainless steel should be okay. When
I've had to do something similar, I've used those large
plastic measuring cups that come
with laundry detergents (which at least here in the UK are
circular, transparent, and a couple of inches across). Drill a
few holes with a skewer and these make useful short term
"floating homes" for eggs and
newborn fry.>
The holes allow the water to flow through but are small enough to
keep the tadpoles in, safe from hungry frogs. I have had a
curious snail or two who has crawled into the strainer but I do
not imagine that they're much of a threat to the tiny tots,
am I wrong?
<Snails shouldn't cause any harm at all.>
The pollywogs have been living in their nursery for about 2 days
and so far so good. We shall see!
<Keep us posted.>
Cheerio,
Diana
<Cheerio indeed! Neale.>
|
|
Re: Tadpole nursery
4/23/10
I never thought about the rust issue! Tadpoles have been
transferred to a laundry soap lid. Works even better!!
Thanks for the tip.
<Glad to help. Just be sure to use a clean lid rather than one
that's been used to measure out detergent. I seem to have
dozens of these lids kicking about so it's not really a
problem. Have a good weekend Diana, Neale.>
Re: Tadpole nursery
4/26/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
I am going to give my tadpoles to my daughters pre school so they
can watch them grow (hopefully). Additionally, since I appear to
have very active frogs and a hospitable environment for their
eggs I am hoping that this will be my new permanent foster home
for future tadpoles as well I am planning to set up my little 2.5
gallon tank as their new nursery.
<As Bob would say, "Real good".>
1. How much filter material should I take from my established
tank to add to the nursery tank? Half?
<Up to that would be safe, but if you wanted to donate a bit
less, maybe a third, that'd be fine.>
2. Can I move the tadpoles straight away or should I let the run
for a day or two?
<I'd move half now, another half next week, so you can see
everything works to plan.>
3. Will they be okay in an unadorned tank or should I add
substrate and plants?
<A few floating plants would be nice, but otherwise don't
feel rushed to add either.>
4. How should future tadpoles be acclimated to the nursery tank?
Drip system as with fish?
<Yep. As I say, try things out this week, and if all goes to
plan, do the remainder next week. If both times work, then you
probably have a system all worked out.>
Thanks, as always, for your guidance.
D
<Always a pleasure. Good luck! Neale.>
Re: Tadpole nursery 4/29/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
Once my tadpoles have become frogs and I remove them from the
nursery tank will a couple of snails and regular water changes be
enough to keep the nursery tank cycled and alive until the next
batch of tadpoles arrive?
<Possibly, but it will depend on the number of snails and how
big they are.
At the least, you'd want to add a pinch of tadpole food --
whatever that is! -- once every week or two, just to give the
bacteria something to work on.>
I have added about 3 inches of sand to the bottom, perhaps a java
fern or two would help?
<I wouldn't add this much sand unless you're
deliberately trying to create a deep sand bed, in which case
things becoming complicated -- though fun.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_7/volume_7_1/dsb.html
If that isn't your aim, then you only need just enough sand
to cover the glass, half an inch should do. Remember, Java fern
and Anubias don't go into the sand; you attach them to rocks
and wood.>
Also, once the tank becomes established may I remove the filter
media and rely on the substrate to house the beneficial bacteria
for the tank?
<If you create a DSB, yes, this can happen. Indeed, I have a
tank with cherry shrimps and Tylomelania snails operating in
precisely this way. But if you don't create a DSB, then no,
you need to keep some sort of filter in the system.>
I have noticed that the tiny guys are getting sucked into the
filter and trapped in the floss and other material. If the filter
were empty they would likely get sucked in the bottom and spit
out the top.
<Try using a sponge filter, something like the Algarde Biofoam
45. These suck only as strongly as the air pump, and if you set
the air pump real low -- and install a valve on the air pipe to
bleed off some of the air if needs be -- you can create extremely
gentle currents. Better still, the sponge becomes colonised with
bacteria, algae and Protozoans upon which baby fish and frogs
happily feed.>
Thanks,
D
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tadpole nursery 4/30/10
Thanks Neale. I am beginning to think I getting in deeper than I
planned.
Ha!
<Oh, so often the case. Out of tiny acorns (or tadpoles) to
mighty oaks (frogs) grow!>
Diana
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tadpole nursery 5/4/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
I still have one tiny survivor left - spike the little tadpole
who wouldn't quit. How long before my little spike sprouts
legs?
<Difficult to say. Shouldn't be very long after the others
metamorphose, so I'd expect him to finish being a tadpole
within the next few days. Try upping the temperature very
slightly, perhaps a couple of degrees. With cold blooded animals,
that usually speeds up their metabolic processes.>
And should I begin feeding him anything besides powdered food for
fry?
<If he's big enough to take other things, then sure,
graduate up to regular flake/pellets/whatever.>
Thanks buddy,
D
<Always a pleasure. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tadpole nursery 6/16/10
Good day Neale,
I have been changing 25% of my tanks water daily with a 50%
solution of the rift valley mix. Today is the first day that I
have seen any progress in Ph or KH, 7.2 and 4 degrees
respectively.
<Already much healthier, even approaching ideal.>
I am aiming for 8.0 and 6-7 degrees correct?
<Not necessarily; so long as you have a steady pH 7.5
you're fine, and the KH value doesn't really matter so
long as its somewhere between 4 and 8.>
Should I continue daily changes to get there?
<Yes, but feel free to tweak the amount of mineral salt mix.
Reduce the baking soda portion if you want a lower KH -- and
therefore lower pH -- or reduce the Epsom salt portion if you
want a lower GH. Obviously, teaspoons
are a very rough and ready approach, so there's a certain
amount of experimenting involved. Within reason, slight variation
from water change to water change won't harm the fish, frogs
or shrimps.>
My ammonia, however is still quite high. Down to 0 right after
water change but back up to 1.0-2.0 this morning. I am planning
to do another 25% change this evening.
<Odd. I hope the pH drop wasn't so severe the filter
bacteria died, in which case the tank will be cycling again. If
you have a second aquarium, grabbing some live filter media and
carrying it across to this tank would help. Even adding a scoop
of gravel would be a plus.>
There has been no additional loss of life-phew
<Cool.>
In the mean time I have a Seachem Purigen synthetic filter
product that I could add to the filter canister while I work on
getting the biological filtration up and running. It says it
removes ammonia etc while raising RedOx.
<Using chemical media to remove ammonia doesn't really
help. For one thing, it's expensive. But it also removes the
ammonia required by filter bacteria, slowing down the cycling
process.>
Also states that impact on trace minerals is minimal.
Looking forward to hearing your thoughts.
Diana
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tadpole nursery
Thank you.
<No problem.>
I have been searching for clues as to what I could gave done to
cause this drastic change in water chemistry... I have my tank
light set up on a timer to take a 2 hour nap in the afternoon to
avoid massive black hair algae growth that I have battled in the
past.
<Indeed.>
So light is on 8-12 off 12-2 on 2-6:00. I also add liquid c02 and
plant food daily plus one drop of iodide semi monthly. Do you
think either of these could have aided in this rapid decline if
tank stability?
<Nope.>
I don't have another tank to borrow from. Any benefit to
adding nitrifying bacteria purchased from fish store?
<Perhaps, but I wouldn't personally bother. The bacteria
are likely in the tank already, and it's simply a question of
allowing them enough time to recover. Adding some live *media*
would start filtering the water immediately, but adding bacteria
is really not doing anything beyond "seeding" the
aquarium with bacteria, which you already have.>
I know they have liquid and freeze dried versions.
<Neither of which are terribly highly regarded among those of
us who've been doing this awhile...>
Or, perhaps I could buy a scoop of sand or some filter media from
my fish store.
<Always the risk of introducing diseases and/or snails. What
actually does work rather better is adding a clump of some type
of floating plant. Their feathery roots support LOTS of bacteria,
and they also remove ammonia
directly from the water. Indian Fern would be my pick of the
bunch, but whatever you can get will likely do. Often these are
sold in pots, so they're relatively unlikely to be carrying
Whitespot or snails.>
Cheers,
D
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tadpole nursery 6/22/10
Hi Neale,
<Hello Diana,>
I am following up on our series of emails with a status report. I
was away for 4 days so I was anxious to see how everything
survived while I was gone. And, I must say I am pleasantly
surprised!
<Good to hear.>
Before leaving I added some floating lettuce of some sort,
changed 25% of the water, and instructed my husband to feed the
frogs every other day.
<Clearly a man who understands his responsibilities!>
Upon my return today the ph is 8.0, KH 6-7 and the ammonia maybe
0.25.
<Curious.>
In addition, I have noticed green algae on the side of the tank
which I haven't seen for quite a while.
<Green algae is not too difficult to eliminate. If you can,
pick up one or two Nerite snails. They don't breed under
aquarium conditions, and eat green algae from glass most
effectively. The ones called 'Batman Snails' (Neripteron
auriculata) and 'Spiny Nerites' (Clithon spp.) would be
ideal.>
Best of all, everyone who was there when I left is accounted for
and alive So, I feel that I am on my way to restoring my tanks
balance.
<Indeed.>
Thank you for your advice, patience and wisdom. You have gotten
me through yet another tough spot.
<Always nice to hear.>
Would it be safe to replace the cherry and Amano shrimp that I
lost with the crash or should I wait?
<I'd wait a few weeks, just to see what happens.>
Thanks Neale. You are a true sage!!
<Very kind.>
Diana
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
African Dwarf Frog TADPOLES!!! Need help...pretty please??
- 02/09/2007 Hey there ya'll, <Christa> My name is
Christa, and I have a total of three (3) ADF's'¦two (2)
in one tank all by themselves (And Fishy Furniture of course) and the
other one is in our 20 gallon tank with a few fish and a pleco. The
reason for my request for information is this'¦ It was time
for a partial water change in Waldo and Newbie's tank. (the two
ADF's that live together) I know that I have a male and a female,
because I have seen them mate before. However'¦I got these
two little cuties when they were the size of a small peanut, and since
the males do not reach sexual maturity until after the 6 month mark, I
didn't have any tadpoles that produced from their frolicking.
Well'¦later on that night, after I did the water change, I
noticed they were mating. I didn't really pay it any mind, since
there has been no 'luck' in the past. (Boy was I wrong!!) The
next morning when I woke, I walked downstairs to turn all the tanks on
and feed everyone, and low-and-behold, there were hundreds of little
eggs throughout the floating grasses at the top of the water and
clinging to all sides of the hexagon-shaped tank. <Neat> I
discussed maybe raising them, with my boyfriend. (who is more the
nature-type than myself'¦ just being honest. I'm a
City-Girl.) He asked me a very good question'¦ 'What in
the world did I intend to do with all the baby frogs?' So, I spoke
with a local Fish and Supply store here in our neighborhood and asked
if they would be interested in taking them off my hands (most of them
anyways'¦ I would like to keep a few) when they are a little
older and much to my surprise, he said he would love too. <Oh yes...
are good sellers> So the journey has begun!! Yeah!! I can't wait
to watch this. I've never seen anything like this before.
Again'¦'City Girl'. So the little-guy's have
hatched, and are swimming around with itty-bitty tails. It only took
about 3 days!! I have received many ideas as to what to feed them, such
as lightly steamed zucchini, lightly crumpled lettuce that has been
sitting in room temp water for 4-6 days, someone even said regular old
fish flakes. <Mmm, yes... and perhaps a bit of "cultured"
algae... "Nori, Kombu"... from Asian food stores or the area
in your food stores...> I am open for anymore suggestions. I also
understand that they need fresh water and just how important this is to
their survival. <A good idea to make quite frequent small
change-outs... ten percent every few days...> To The Point Your web
site has been rather helpful in raising my ADF's. However, I
can't seem to get an answer to a few questions I have on raising
these teeny-tiny tadpoles. And I mean Teeny-Tiny!! I have these little
fellas (tadpoles) in a 2.5 gallon hexagon shaped tank with a filter
that suctions from the bottom, and there's a clear cylinder in the
back with bubbles that rise from the bottom. I really don't know
what kind of filtration systems it is called, so I tried my best to
describe it. My questions are these'¦ <Best to use a
"sponge" or foam filter here... See Eheim or Jungle
Laboratories sites re...> 1. Should I turn the filter off? They are
going for one heck-of-a roller coaster ride when they are swept around
by the rising bubbles. <Yes... I would switch to the filtration
method mentioned above... or an "open" (top off) box filter
with just Dacron filter media...> 2. How often should I feed them?
You can't really tell with their tummies. They don't have any
yet. <Daily... I would keep food present most all the time> 3.
How warm should I have the temperature set at? It is at 78 degrees
right now. <This is fine... put the term "Hymenochirus
culture" in your search tools...> 4. Should I leave the light
on all night? Someone told me that they thrive on the micro-organisms
that grow in the water and this promotes the growth? True or False??
<Mmm... do need, use "infusoria" but I would turn the
light off regularly> 5. What should I really be feeding them? The
suggestions I've gotten sound a little weird. <See, weed through
the above search...> 6. How often do I need to do a partial water
change for these little guys? <Often... as stated above> So,
that's about it. Thanks for keeping this web site up and
operational. It has been a great source of valuable and extremely hard
to find elsewhere information. New Tadpole Mommy Manassas, VA <I do
wish we had more on this species, the whole Order, much MUCH for other
groups... In time... And congratulations on your efforts. Bob
Fenner>
Dwarf frog update, repro. 9/23/07 Hi, it's Betty, owner
of Slim and Chance, the dwarf frogs, so named because I really
didn't think they'd make it when I bought them more than a year
ago. They were so tiny, I was just sure I'd kill them somehow. But
they've actually thrived under my care, and as luck would have it,
Slim turned out to be male, and Chance turned out to be female. So for
the last few months, those two have been mating like crazy, and I
thought, "That's cool, I haven't seen a tadpole-to-frog
transformation since I was a kid." So I began trying to raise the
tadpoles by putting them in a different tank, and at first, I
didn't have much luck keeping them alive. Then I started keeping
some of them in the tank with the frogs, and some of them separated,
with mixed results. Actually, I noticed that the ones in the frog tank
seemed to do better than the ones I took out. Then I discovered a
tadpole that was much bigger than the rest (I've named him
Tadzilla). <Good name> I put him in his own tank, because he was
harassing the smaller tadpoles; now he has developed "arms"
and legs and I'm just waiting for his tail to disappear. In the
meantime, Slim and Chance are still going at it, churning out batch
after batch of eggs. And I discovered just yesterday that the tadpoles
still in the frog tank are actually eating the eggs! <Ah yes> I
came home to find these "little" tadpoles looking like
miniature beach balls with tails. What I'm wondering is will they
continue to eat frog eggs till they die from too much food?
<Seemingly, but no> I gave some eggs to Tadzilla and he scarfed
them down too. I guess it's good protein, but should I be concerned
about leaving the eggs where the tads can continue to gorge themselves?
<Only if you want to rear the new ones> And what about Slim and
Chance -- will they EVER stop making babies??? <Will happen,
assuredly> I'm reminded of the person who wrote that his female
frog is a "professional egg layer." I know just what he
means. Any advice? <"You gotta keep 'em separated..."
only if you intend to be a breeder of proportion... I'd look around
and raise, sell your excess... Bob Fenner>
Is it OK to feed dwarf frog tadpoles to my dwarf
puffer? 7/15/07 Hi, it's me -- Betty -- <Hi Betty, it's
me--Pufferpunk.> owner of dwarf frogs Slim and Chance, and also the
owner of a dwarf puffer named Puff-Diddy. <I remember you!> Well,
my dwarf frogs have finally mated successfully and now I'm the
proud owner of lots and lots of teeny, tiny tadpoles. I don't
really want any more dwarf frogs (although I do love Slim and Chance).
I'm aware that they'll eat their babies if they're in the
same tank, so I'm cool with that. I was wondering if I could feed
some tadpoles to the dwarf puffer? Will he eat tiny tadpoles and will
they be OK for him to eat? Also, could I try feeding tadpoles to Flash,
my male Betta? <I don't think they would hurt but I also
don't believe that would be a natural food for a puffer. I suppose
they might come across tadpoles in nature. Try it & find out. Just
be sure to remove any uneaten parts. ~PP><<RMF would raise the
ADFs, sell them for big bongo bucks, buy frozen foods to feed the GSPs
with the profits...>> Betty Williams
Re: Is it OK to feed dwarf frog tadpoles to my dwarf
puffer? & Breeding Frogs 7/17/07 OK, here's a follow-up:
Today I noticed the tadpoles were dead or dying, so I went ahead and
gave some to my dwarf puffer, and he scarfed them down like potato
chips! It was neat to watch. However, I did hope that some of the tads
would survive to adulthood. I have a friend who would like a pair of
frogs like mine. So I'd like to know when Slim and Chance are
likely to mate again? If well conditioned and the water stays clean you
have a pretty good chance of them going again.> How many times a
year do dwarf frogs typically mate? < Depends on the pair and on the
conditions. I am not sure but I think they can breed at least twice a
year but the pair must be well feed.> I also realize I wasn't
exactly prepared to raise tadpoles; I didn't have them in a heated
tank, and I never could find a place that sold LiquiFry. I just crushed
some Fish and Tadpole Bites and scattered them in the bowl they were
in. So I'd like to be better prepared next time the blessed event
occurs. Any recommendations? < Try Spirulina powder sold in health
food stores. It is a powdered form of algae. Or try crushed Spirulina
flake food from OSI.-Chuck>
African Dwarf Frog TADPOLES!!! Need help...pretty please?? -
02/09/2007 Hey there ya'll, <Christa> My name is Christa,
and I have a total of three (3) ADF's'¦two (2) in one
tank all by themselves (And Fishy Furniture of course) and the other
one is in our 20 gallon tank with a few fish and a pleco. The reason
for my request for information is this'¦ It was time for a
partial water change in Waldo and Newbie's tank. (the two ADF's
that live together) I know that I have a male and a female, because I
have seen them mate before. However'¦I got these two little
cuties when they were the size of a small peanut, and since the males
do not reach sexual maturity until after the 6 month mark, I didn't
have any tadpoles that produced from their frolicking.
Well'¦later on that night, after I did the water change, I
noticed they were mating. I didn't really pay it any mind, since
there has been no 'luck' in the past. (Boy was I wrong!!) The
next morning when I woke, I walked downstairs to turn all the tanks on
and feed everyone, and low-and-behold, there were hundreds of little
eggs throughout the floating grasses at the top of the water and
clinging to all sides of the hexagon-shaped tank. <Neat> I
discussed maybe raising them, with my boyfriend. (who is more the
nature-type than myself'¦ just being honest. I'm a
City-Girl.) He asked me a very good question'¦ 'What in
the world did I intend to do with all the baby frogs?' So, I spoke
with a local Fish and Supply store here in our neighborhood and asked
if they would be interested in taking them off my hands (most of them
anyways'¦ I would like to keep a few) when they are a little
older and much to my surprise, he said he would love too. <Oh yes...
are good sellers> So the journey has begun!! Yeah!! I can't wait
to watch this. I've never seen anything like this before.
Again'¦'City Girl'. So the little-guy's have
hatched, and are swimming around with itty-bitty tails. It only took
about 3 days!! I have received many ideas as to what to feed them, such
as lightly steamed zucchini, lightly crumpled lettuce that has been
sitting in room temp water for 4-6 days, someone even said regular old
fish flakes. <Mmm, yes... and perhaps a bit of "cultured"
algae... "Nori, Kombu"... from Asian food stores or the area
in your food stores...> I am open for anymore suggestions. I also
understand that they need fresh water and just how important this is to
their survival. <A good idea to make quite frequent small
change-outs... ten percent every few days...> To The Point Your web
site has been rather helpful in raising my ADF's. However, I
can't seem to get an answer to a few questions I have on raising
these teeny-tiny tadpoles. And I mean Teeny-Tiny!! I have these little
fellas (tadpoles) in a 2.5 gallon hexagon shaped tank with a filter
that suctions from the bottom, and there's a clear cylinder in the
back with bubbles that rise from the bottom. I really don't know
what kind of filtration systems it is called, so I tried my best to
describe it. My questions are these'¦ <Best to use a
"sponge" or foam filter here... See Eheim or Jungle
Laboratories sites re...> 1. Should I turn the filter off? They are
going for one heck-of-a roller coaster ride when they are swept around
by the rising bubbles. <Yes... I would switch to the filtration
method mentioned above... or an "open" (top off) box filter
with just Dacron filter media...> 2. How often should I feed them?
You can't really tell with their tummies. They don't have any
yet. <Daily... I would keep food present most all the time> 3.
How warm should I have the temperature set at? It is at 78 degrees
right now. <This is fine... put the term "Hymenochirus
culture" in your search tools...> 4. Should I leave the light
on all night? Someone told me that they thrive on the micro-organisms
that grow in the water and this promotes the growth? True or False??
<Mmm... do need, use "infusoria" but I would turn the
light off regularly> 5. What should I really be feeding them? The
suggestions I've gotten sound a little weird. <See, weed through
the above search...> 6. How often do I need to do a partial water
change for these little guys? <Often... as stated above> So,
that's about it. Thanks for keeping this web site up and
operational. It has been a great source of valuable and extremely hard
to find elsewhere information. New Tadpole Mommy Manassas, VA <I do
wish we had more on this species, the whole Order, much MUCH for other
groups... In time... And congratulations on your efforts. Bob
Fenner>
Dwarf Frog Tadpoles and Eggs I'm hoping you can help me,
my dwarf frogs have been laying eggs for months, this time I actually
have tadpoles swimming around in the aquarium. I'm fearful that the
big ones will eat the tadpoles but I'm not sure which ones I should
transfer into a new home and what to do. <It is a good idea to move
the adults and any other livestock other than the tadpoles, and raise
them where they are currently> I'm not prepared because I
didn't think the eggs would actually do anything and by switching
the big ones to a different tank I'm afraid I might shock them.
Also what do the tadpoles need to eat? <Do start preparing water to
change that which is in the system (best to store it in a clean (no
soap residue) container for a week or more... I would also add a sponge
filter or two here... good for these animals who can be messy, and not
a problem in terms of "sucking them up". You can feed them on
a number of foods... blanched zucchini, fish flake foods, pellets...
just take care to NOT overfeed. Bob Fenner> HELP!!!! Is there
anything I can do and if so what.
Re: Your Dwarf Frogs Robert: Sorry to bother you again but
now I think I have another problem. My female frog the professional egg
layer looks as if she is going to blow up. Since I last e-mailed you
she has laid two more batches of eggs. I did remove the adults from the
one aquarium to another but that was prior to the two additional
batches. The male appears to be fine and thin but I swear if I stuck
her with a pin right now she would fly to the moon. Is there anything I
can do or is this usual? <Hmm, likely not unusual... seasonal...
hopefully not egg-bound> I'm afraid she might die if I don't
try and help her. Sorry to be such a pest but I've had these guys
for five years and I've become quite attached. <I understand...
most of what I might suggest is worse than waiting/seeing. Bob
Fenner>
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