Lololol, yeah I will !!! Yes, most definitely….patience is the essential ingredient in catching wood frogs lol. No, I actually couldn’t get them tested for the chytrid fungus, mostly because there are a lot of expensive tests involved. I did help a graduate student from the University of Oregon though gather samples from wild Wood frogs to test for the chytrid fungus. I asked her if there was a small scale, yet reliable way to test my Wood frogs….she said there was but it would require a high knowledge as to what the disease looked like via a microscope. Instead, I just individually quarantined the frogs in separate containers and monitored them for disease for about a month and a half.
Good job, well it worked out so far and now you get to enjoy them. Keep us updated on your further studies.