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Thread: STILL not eating!

  1. #1
    HerpDerp
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    Default STILL not eating!

    So I think I've posted a couple times on here about different food issues. I have taken all the advice and my pacman frog is still not eating much at all. Here is the list from "trouble in the enclosure"

    1. 10 Gallon tank

    2. Just the one frog

    3. Humidity was fluctuating between 50% and 80% but I recently covered 2/3 of the top in plastic wrap and it's now staying within 10% of 80% (if that makes sense lol)

    4. Was having trouble with temps so I bought a second UTH (both are on either side of a corner). Now the temp is around 80-82 on the warm side and upper 70s on the cool side.

    5. Water for misting and soaking are both dechlorinated tap water.

    6. Eco earth is used as substrate.

    7. In the enclosure I have a couple plastic aquarium plants and some live pothos. The plastic plants were rinsed with boiling hot water and then rinsed again with dechlorinated tap water. The live plants were removed from the pots and the soil rinsed from the roots and replaced with eco earth and the pots were put back in the tank for easier cleaning.

    8. The main food source is crickets but I also feed dubia and red wigglers

    9. I use a supplement with a multivitamin and calcium and was dusting every 5 days or so but now that he's not really eating it's much less often.

    10. For lighting I'm using a florescent tropical reptile/amphibian bulb on one side of the enclosure.

    11. As I said above, two UTH's

    12. Hmm... I actually got him to eat about 3 crickets about a week ago since then I think he at maybe one two days later and two days ago I got him to eat one more (these are small crickets).

    13. Found a poop in the water dish a couple days ago.

    14. I don't have a recent pic right now but I will try to get one up tomorrow. But this frog is sooo skinny

    15. I'm not sure of the actual age but he was the size of a nickel when I got him at the beginning of April and is now about the size of a half dollar.

    16. As I said, I've had him since the beginning of April.

    17. I'm not sure if he's wild caught or captive bred but I'm assuming captive since he was so small when I got him and I got him from petsmart.

    18. I think I covered the different things I feed him. I attempt to feed him every day but am usually unsuccessful.

    19. I handle him very rarely. I have been trying to put him in a separate container to feed him to make it easier for him so every few days I need to gently pick him up and put him in there. I always rinse my hands with dechlorinated water before handling.

    20. It's just my boyfriend and I in the apartment so the entire place is low traffic. However he is right next to the tv. Would that cause any stress?

    21. Water dish gets changed daily. Poops are scooped as they're seen. I change the substrate completely about monthly.


    I have been having trouble getting him to eat for a few weeks now. He's never been very round even when he was eating well. I worry that there might be something else wrong that I can control. When I first got him he was eating great but now he hardly ever strikes at food and when he does it's very sluggish and inaccurate. I have tried using tongs and rubbing food against his lips until he bites but he wont bite. He just backs up or hops away. I have read so many posts and just can't figure out why he isn't eating. His backbone is clearly visible. I'm not really sure if he's going to make it. Any ideas would be great.

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  3. #2
    Moderator GrifTheGreat's Avatar
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Try a Luke warm UNFLAVORED PEDIALYTE soak. 10 to 1 ratio. For every 10 ounces of Luke warm de-chlorinated water add one ounce of Unflavored Pedialyte. let him soak for 20 minutes. repeat daily go every other day. water level should be no deeper than up to the frogs chin.

    If he continues to not eat he may need to be force feed, but try the soak first.

    Keep us posted.


  4. #3
    Ivan M
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Also from reading in your other post you just moved him again to the enclosure where you used to keep your crickets, so that again is a new environment to him/her, try and offer food after a few days versus right away, these frogs or many animals for that matter stress out whenever their habitats change. Be patient after moving him from one an enclosure to another. I don't even attempt to feed until after about 3-4 days after the frog has settled in, i have yet to have a frog not eat using this method. When wiggling the worm use tongs if you have, i use med size tweezers you can get at petco.

  5. #4
    HerpDerp
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    I can try the pedialite soak and see where that gets me.

    And Ivan, I think you misread . I had tried putting him in a smaller tupperware container within his tank to feed him so it was easier for him to eat but that only worked once. And I was considering moving the tank to a different area. I do use tongs and he used to eat from them find but now he just backs up and hops away.

    Any ideas as to WHY he isn't eating?? I just can't seem to figure it out.

  6. #5
    Moderator GrifTheGreat's Avatar
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Quote Originally Posted by HerpDerp View Post
    I can try the pedialite soak and see where that gets me.

    And Ivan, I think you misread . I had tried putting him in a smaller tupperware container within his tank to feed him so it was easier for him to eat but that only worked once. And I was considering moving the tank to a different area. I do use tongs and he used to eat from them find but now he just backs up and hops away.

    Any ideas as to WHY he isn't eating?? I just can't seem to figure it out.
    Something is causing stress. I'm just not sure what. Could be anything from being moved around to different enclosures to just not being used to you yet. There are many many factors that can cause them stress. They really hate change. Especially within their environment. So it could be anybodies guess. I'm not there so I can only advise with what info you provide. Those of us who have lots if experience with these frogs know what to look for and can tell immediately if something is wrong because we watch them every day and night. Since we cannot do that with your frog it makes it difficult to pinpoint the problem, but we will assist you to the best of our ability with what you've provided.


  7. #6
    Ivan M
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    One more thing, if he ate a week or 2 ago and has decent body weight, where ever you decide to put his tank let him be for a few days before offering food or hovering over him, we frog lovers can do that to our frogs constantly hover over them and watch them, that can cause them stress in the beginning, offer food in his own enclosure WITHOUT removing him from it, once he has eaten a few times then you can try the feeding out of his enclosure if you like. As GRIFF has stated we are not there, but something surely is stressing him out.

  8. #7
    HerpDerp
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    So I have followed advice and he is STILL not eating . I tried force feeding him but he just wouldn't open his mouth. I watched some videos online on how to do it. Maybe I just was being too gentle but I didn't want to hurt him or stress him too much. I'm just so frustrated and worried. Last night he acted super interested in food but missed a couple times and gave up and wouldn't touch the crickets. And he wont take food from tongs anymore at all. I just don't know what could possibly be stressing my poor frog so much. I'm at a total loss. Maybe these pictures will provide some more insight and to show you guys just how skinny he is .
    Attached Images Attached Images   

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    Moderator GrifTheGreat's Avatar
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Is that the gauge you use all the time and if so do you always place it in the substrate? You need a Thermometer and hygrometer that is mounted on the back wall dead center of the back wall 1 1/2" above the substrate so you achieve a more accurate reading. You have to maintain ambient air temps and humidity as well as soil moisture. The gauge you have will not give a accurate reading if placed within the soil. This may be your problem. You do not have the correct climate because you're not reading the enclosures conditions correctly. This will cause stress and the frog will stop eating.

    If he is trying though that is a good sign. Break the back legs off the crickets so they're easier to catch. He will be less likely to miss if they can't jump away.

    When force feeding you do need to be gentle but apply pressure firmly. They have strong jaws and thus can resist rarely well. You can use a little shopper card since they're small it may be easier for you to use to open the frogs mouth. Place the corner of the card between the upper and lower jaws on the side of the mouth dead center between the hinge of the jaw and snout. I have found this to be the easiest place to open their mouths. Just apply pressure gently yet firmly enough to open the mouth and immediately place the food item in. It doesn't have to be placed all the way in. If the frog bites down on the food item then it should do the rest.

    Note that there is no way to avoid stress when force feeding. If someone was forcing your mouth open you would be stressed as well. Just be careful.


  10. #9
    HerpDerp
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    I am SO relieved! I ended up not having to force feed him. I had moved the enclosure last Friday out of the living room and into a quieter area. This seemed to help some of his stress but he still wasn't eating. So after attempting to get him to eat a Dubia (which he may have eaten overnight, or it may have burrowed, not sure) I gave up for the night and decided to re-***** the next day. I woke up to a poop in the tank so he must have eaten something! I do have a few worms wiggling around the substrate because he didn't eat them and I left crickets in there on more than one occasion hoping that he would eat when I wasn't looking. But I have a textured background that they can easily climb and possibly escape so I never really knew. But after seeing that poop I decided to buy some wax worms to entice him. I also bought a clear food storage container that I could put on top of him and his potential food like a dome so it would be easier to catch and so that he wouldn't get stressed from moving. When I got home I decided to try just the wax worms to start and wouldn't you know he lunged right for it! He had trouble catching the first one but once he got that in him he ate two more! I'm so excited that I got him to eat. And I made sure to dust them too so he can get some vitamins he's probably been lacking!

    So here is my question: I know wax worms are very high in fat and are NOT a good stable BUT he's so very underweight. Is it nutritionally safe to feed them as a staple until he is a healthy weight again? And if so, how many per day should he eat? He's about an inch and a half long and I've had him almost three months but I'm not sure how old he was when I got him but he was very small (size of a nickel?).

    And about the thermometers. It's actually not "in" the substrate. It has a weighted bottom that I put in the substrate. And I have two, one on each end so I can measure the temps on the cool end and the warm end. Is this still okay? I can stick in the middle of the back if need be. And Any other suggestions about feeding and keeping his appetite up would be great. I'm hoping I can get him used to tong feeding again so I know exactly how much he's getting.

  11. #10
    BigBlue83
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    I am glad you are feeling better, and you realized he was eating. (and its great to get them to star eating with you around, i remember the feeling) ive had my pacman for six months and in the begining he was stressed from the move and wouldnt eat. no he eats like a champ!

  12. #11
    100+ Post Member DVirginiana's Avatar
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    I have the same problem with dubias burrowing... They go under the substrate in like thirty seconds, but about 70% of the time my frog won't eat while I'm watching so I have to leave food in there.

    There are other people that can give better advice, but I'd personally feed him whatever he'll eat until he reaches a healthy weight, and maybe offer other food with the wax worms. Watch out for impaction though! Waxworms can be really bad for that. The high fat content should only cause problems if you do it long term.

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    Moderator GrifTheGreat's Avatar
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Should be fine, but keep offering other foods as well so you can use the Waxworms as a treat soon rather than him only eat them. Chunks of earthworm about as fat and long as a Waxworm may trick him into eating earthworms.


  14. #13
    HerpDerp
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Thanks for the great advice. I think I'll try night crawlers cut up once I get him used to tongs again. I just got more crickets too so I'll keep offering them too. These seem to be the only two food items he is at all interested in!

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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Quote Originally Posted by HerpDerp View Post
    So I have followed advice and he is STILL not eating . I tried force feeding him but he just wouldn't open his mouth. I watched some videos online on how to do it. Maybe I just was being too gentle but I didn't want to hurt him or stress him too much. I'm just so frustrated and worried. Last night he acted super interested in food but missed a couple times and gave up and wouldn't touch the crickets. And he wont take food from tongs anymore at all. I just don't know what could possibly be stressing my poor frog so much. I'm at a total loss. Maybe these pictures will provide some more insight and to show you guys just how skinny he is .
    Force feeding them can be stressful but if any of my frogs looked as emaciated as the frog in the photo you provided, I wouldnt hesitate to force feed the frog as soon as possible. Use a small playing card (make sure it doesnt have sharp edges) or a thin id card or credit card. When Ive had to do this I gently insert the corner (not a sharp corner) of the card into the SIDE of the frogs mouth. a very small amount of pressure and the frogs will generally open their mouths, then you just slip the food in as far as possible. It may help to have someone hold the frog still while you open its mouth with one hand and insert the food with another. Considering the difficulty of doing this, one somewhat larger food item, such as strip of catfish or a nightcrawler may make it easier. Im sure it can handle a nightcrawler.
    I would also not hesitate to do as suggested and pick up some unflavored pedialyte to mix into some water and let the frog soak in it for a period of time every day. This will not only help keep the frog hydrated but the electrolytes in the pedialyte will give the frog a boost of energy and help stimulate appetite.
    I would continue with force feeding every every couple to three days, depending on its age and rate of digestion, as well as the daily pedialyte soaks until the Frog no longer looks emaciated. If the frog continues to look emaciated after a few weeks, consider that it may have a a disease or bacterial infection.

    I would also place the frog into a cage designed with a somewhat more spartan setting where the frog and its cage conditions can be more easily monitored until it returns to good health, such as a setup with very shallow (chin deep when at rest) water, with a land section consisting a section of spnge filter medium such as this Amazon.com: Black Economic Aquarium Filter Sponge for Fish Tank: Pet Supplies and a hide for the frogs security, using a low wattage red incandescent heat lamp for warmth. I prefer overhead heating of this manner as opposed to a undertank heater or having a "warm side and a cool side" because these frogs burrow (or hide under a log) to escape heat. So while the surface of the soil may be rather warm, it will remain cool underneath and the frog will regulate by either burrowing down a bit or coming to the surface (or coming in and out of its hide). A basking bearded dragon will move down from a basking spot and seek out the cool side of a tank or enclosure, as may a basking turtle, but Horned Frogs are not hardwired to walk off to the other side of their cage a bit, away from the heat if they get too warm.
    Your current setup looks very elaborate and hard to clean, and bacteria can build up in these conditions very rapidly. With the spartan setup Ive suggested, you simply remove the frog, dump the water, rinse the filter medium and wipe out the tank.
    In a more naturalistic setting I prefer Sphagnum moss over coco fiber, because it makes cleaning a bit easier. I also havent had too many plants survive the rather destructive nature of a large adult horned frog.
    Thats my two cents. Good luck.

  16. #15
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    ALSO! Can the frog even get into that water dish? Or out of it for that matter? Consider a different soaking dish for your frog perhaps.

  17. #16
    HerpDerp
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Actually he just started eating last night so I'm thinking that force feeding is not going to be necessary (if he continues eating on his own). And you would be surprised how easy the tank is to clean. The plants that are in there are all in pots so I can take them out to clean and so he can't destroy the roots. It's very easy and effective. And the UTH is on the side of the tank not the bottom so he can still burrow to cool off. And he will go to the other side of the tank if he needs to. he usually is on the warm side in the morning and will move between the two sides throughout the day.

    And yes, he can get into the water dish. Generally It's pushed into the substrate more usually. But he seems to have no problems getting in and out of it. It's only a temporary dish until he gets bigger. Because he will be outgrowing it soon I'm sure.

  18. #17
    Moderator GrifTheGreat's Avatar
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Quote Originally Posted by Ra View Post
    Force feeding them can be stressful but if any of my frogs looked as emaciated as the frog in the photo you provided, I wouldnt hesitate to force feed the frog as soon as possible. Use a small playing card (make sure it doesnt have sharp edges) or a thin id card or credit card. When Ive had to do this I gently insert the corner (not a sharp corner) of the card into the SIDE of the frogs mouth. a very small amount of pressure and the frogs will generally open their mouths, then you just slip the food in as far as possible. It may help to have someone hold the frog still while you open its mouth with one hand and insert the food with another. Considering the difficulty of doing this, one somewhat larger food item, such as strip of catfish or a nightcrawler may make it easier. Im sure it can handle a nightcrawler.
    I would also not hesitate to do as suggested and pick up some unflavored pedialyte to mix into some water and let the frog soak in it for a period of time every day. This will not only help keep the frog hydrated but the electrolytes in the pedialyte will give the frog a boost of energy and help stimulate appetite.
    I would continue with force feeding every every couple to three days, depending on its age and rate of digestion, as well as the daily pedialyte soaks until the Frog no longer looks emaciated. If the frog continues to look emaciated after a few weeks, consider that it may have a a disease or bacterial infection.

    I would also place the frog into a cage designed with a somewhat more spartan setting where the frog and its cage conditions can be more easily monitored until it returns to good health, such as a setup with very shallow (chin deep when at rest) water, with a land section consisting a section of spnge filter medium such as this Amazon.com: Black Economic Aquarium Filter Sponge for Fish Tank: Pet Supplies and a hide for the frogs security, using a low wattage red incandescent heat lamp for warmth. I prefer overhead heating of this manner as opposed to a undertank heater or having a "warm side and a cool side" because these frogs burrow (or hide under a log) to escape heat. So while the surface of the soil may be rather warm, it will remain cool underneath and the frog will regulate by either burrowing down a bit or coming to the surface (or coming in and out of its hide). A banking bearded dragon will move down from a basking spot and seek out the cool side of a tank or enclosure, as may a basking turtle, but Horned Frogs are not hardwired to walk off to the other side of their cage a bit, away from the heat if they get too warm.
    Your current setup looks very elaborate and hard to clean, and bacteria can build up in these conditions very rapidly. With the spartan setup Ive suggested, you simply remove the frog, dump the water, rinse the filter medium and wipe out the tank.
    In a more naturalistic setting I prefer Sphagnum moss over coco fiber, because it makes cleaning a bit easier. I also havent had too many plants survive the rather destructive nature of a large adult horned frog.
    Thats my two cents. Good luck.
    Moss is a serious impacting risk. The frog is Fed within its enclosure and removing the frog to feed at this point will cause unnecessary stress. Especially now that the frog has finally become comfortable enough to actually eat on its own.q


  19. #18
    HerpDerp
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    I am happy to say that he ate again yesterday and is starting to look a little bit better. Definitely not as skinny. And I managed to do that without totally modifying his habitat and without force feeding. Such a weight off my shoulders. Now hopefully it stays that way! Thanks for all of the advice!

  20. #19
    Ivan M
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Quote Originally Posted by HerpDerp View Post
    I am happy to say that he ate again yesterday and is starting to look a little bit better. Definitely not as skinny. And I managed to do that without totally modifying his habitat and without force feeding. Such a weight off my shoulders. Now hopefully it stays that way! Thanks for all of the advice!
    EXCELLENT, keep everything the same for a little while, if he is eating in his own enclosure keep feeding him in there, after he puts on weight you can try feeding him out of his enclosure. Looks like you are on your way!

  21. #20
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    Default Re: STILL not eating!

    Anything they can get in there mouths in large enough quantity is an impaction risk. I recently read an account of a frog keeper whose caught an impaction early on, and with some warm water soaks a single force feeding dislodged a large amount of coco fiber from the frogs digestive track.

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