There is no condenstaion in any of my treefrog enclosures and there really should be any in yours either. Does your frog have decent ventilation? Treefrogs need good ventilation, otherwise they will slowly die on you.
There is no condenstaion in any of my treefrog enclosures and there really should be any in yours either. Does your frog have decent ventilation? Treefrogs need good ventilation, otherwise they will slowly die on you.
I have a vent towards the back of the lid that's covered with a fine chicken wire. I also have two large, dual pump, aquarium air pumps hooked to timers that run for 20-30 minutes every two hours, every day, all week to cycle air. I hope that it's enough....
It's pretty cold in my room, and 70 degrees in their vivarium. I mist it every day with treated water so that every thing is moist, and the humidity remains around 50%. I might open the front of the lid a bit to let more air flow out.
I went and bought a small "iced" touch light that gives off a soft glow- hoping to light up their vivarium a bit with it at night so I can watch em crawl around.
My treefrogs all have screen tops, not partial screen tops. They are misted as needed. The only amphbians that have condensation in their enclosures are my salamanders, dart frog, and a few other terrestrial frogs. Arboreals have all have good to great ventilation.
Your air pumps may seem like a good idea, but they are being run enough. Besides good ventilation is much cheaper than the electricity it takes to run those pumps.
In that case i'll probably head out the door in a few minutes to go see if I can find myself a screen top for my tank. I worry a bit about temperature though too....
I have trouble keeping the temperature at 70 degrees, and that's with the solid lid, vent in the back, and insulation on four sides. Should I just get a more powerful heat mat? I could lower my light a bit too. My substrate (large wood chips, Sphagnum moss, and river rocks) is fairly thick, and doesn't transfer heat well I think. Should probably just put less substrate in- would give the frogs more vertical room too.
How think is the the substrate? You can also get a ceremic heater, which will screw into just about any incandescent light fixture. A dome, clamp-on light will work for this.
I use a Red bulb for heat and leave it on all night, red isnt supposed to disturb them at nightime, and keeps it from getting too cold. You should prolly raise the daytime temp to the 80+ region thats a bit cold for a whites tree frog.
The substrate is about an inch and a half in most places. I need to give the whole thing a cleaning in a bit so I'll experiment with having a very thick area where the frogs can go to cool off, and a very thin area (maybe nothing but sphagnum moss) where it will be nice and toasty. If worse comes to worse I'll try a ceramic heater.
I might not get another top though- I propped the little access door on the top open a few centimeters with a pen, and put a weight on top.... Let it sit for about 30 minutes, and all condensation is gone. Temperature is hovering around 65-70, and Humidity is still 50%.
Might have done the trick~
Thanks for the input. I want my frogs to be as happy as can be :]
I've never kept whites, but 65 is definitely in the dangerously low end if they stay that way for extended periods of time. Also, are the woodchips small enough to fit in their mouths? If so, they pose a great risk for impaction. Even if they're generally big, they may break and some of the smaller pieces may be ingested. Perhaps switch to coco dirt?
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