Hi, I am new to this Forum and I am hoping someone can help me. I am so distraught. Long story...I will try to keep it as short as I can.
Jan. 2nd, I bought my son a White's Tree Frog as a birthday gift (which I would be taking care of) from a small Mom and Pop petshop local to me. I know the woman that works there very well and she assured me that this type of frog was very easy to take care for, and just a pleasure to have. So we brought him home. Set up a regular 10 gallon aquarium with a water bowl, some artifcial trees, a place to hide, a screened in lid with a basking light with a 50 watt basking bulb on one side. We put moss on the bottom and misted it. The temp. in the cage was about 70-73 degrees. From day one, he never ate. Not one cricket. I started using a red bulb in the evening thinking it was getting too cold for him at night. We had him for 10 days before the underside of his belly and legs turned completely red and veiny looking and he died. (I should mention, that while I had him, I went back to this pet store to get crickets, and looked at the cage he came from and there was a very sickly looking frog in there with huge white splotches on him. I told the lady there and she said he was not going to make it and took him out). Anyway...so i went back into the pet store and brought Mike (named after the green Power Ranger) in and showed her and she said it looks like he died of "red leg" and she exchanged him out for another one. And yes, this "new Mike" came from the same tank that she said she had cleaned out...(it looked spotless)...and he was the "last frog standing". So this time... I thought the tank may have been a little chilly so i added an under the tank heater to the side of the tank, since the tank sits on the carpet. Brought the temps up to 78-82 degrees, was trying hard to keep the humidity between 50-60 degrees. Well this little guy refused to eat also, and 4 days later he died also. His underside was also red/veiny looking, but not as bad as the first one. He also had one cloudy looking eye. The reason I explained the habitat so thoroughly is I want to see if there is anything I am doing wrong that could be killing these frogs. Like maybe is the bulb i have sitting on the lid too close since it is not a tall terriarium but actually an aquarium? Our intent is to purchase a taller terrarium type tank, but we just didnt' have the money at the time. I know they are wild caught, and have since read that they tend to be less healthy then captive bred. I really want to get another frog..we just fell in love with the little guys....but I don't want to kill another one! I feel so awful.
Sorry so long winded but I wanted to provide enough detail. I would love some advice![]()






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