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flybyferns great information July 24th, 2012, 05:47 AM
mpmistr Re: great information July 24th, 2012, 11:29 AM
Guest Re: great information July 26th, 2012, 06:04 AM
Guest Re: great information July 24th, 2012, 11:30 AM
Guest Re: great information July 26th, 2012, 06:28 AM
Jenste Re: great information July 26th, 2012, 02:19 PM
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  1. #1
    Super Moderator flybyferns's Avatar
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    Default great information

    I found this very interesting. Although this is( or was) a huge system, there are lots of little bits and pieces of very useful information.

    Husbandry, Frog Husbandry, Raising Tadpoles and Frogs, Long Protocol, X. tropicalis, Mustafa Khokha Developmental Biology Lab (Xenopus tropicalis), Yale School of Medicine.html
    Current Collection
    Dendrobates leucomelas - standard morph
    Dendrobates auratus “Costa Rican Green Black"
    Dendrobates auratus "Pena Blanca"
    Dendrobates tinctorius “New River”
    Dendrobates tinctorius "Green Sipaliwini"
    Dendrobates tinctorius “Powder Blue"
    Dendrobates tinctorius "French Guiana Dwarf Cobalt"

    Phyllobates terribilis “Mint”
    Phyllobates terribilis "Orange"
    Phyllobates bicolor "Uraba"

    Oophaga pumilio "Black Jeans"
    Oophaga pumilio "Isla Popa"
    Oophaga pumilio "Bastimentos"
    Oophaga pumilio “Mimbitimbi”
    Oophaga pumilio "Rio Colubre"
    Oophaga pumilio "Red Frog Beach”
    Oophaga pumilio "Rio Branco"
    Oophaga pumilio “Valle del Rey”
    Oophaga pumilio "BriBri"
    Oophaga pumilio "El Dorado"
    Oophaga pumilio "Cristobal"
    Oophaga pumilio "Rambala"

    Oophaga “Vicentei” (blue)

    Oophaga sylvatica "Paru"
    Oophaga sylvatica "Pata Blanca"
    Oophaga histrionica “Redhead”
    Oophaga histrionica "Blue"
    Oophaga lehmanni "Red"
    Oophaga histrionica "Tado"

    Ranitomeya variabilis "Southern"
    Ranitomeya imitator "Varadero"
    Ranitomeya sirensis "Lower Ucayali"
    Ranitomeya vanzolinii

    http://www.fernsfrogs.com
    https://www.facebook.com/ferns.frogs

  2. #2
    100+ Post Member mpmistr's Avatar
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    Default Re: great information

    I'm surprised they keep their xenopus laevis at such high temperatures. I keep mine at 70F I always thought that x. laevis was happiest at 62F-72F.. they seem to keep theirs at 77F.

  3. #3
    froggin
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    Default Re: great information

    Quote Originally Posted by mpmistr View Post
    I'm surprised they keep their xenopus laevis at such high temperatures. I keep mine at 70F I always thought that x. laevis was happiest at 62F-72F.. they seem to keep theirs at 77F.

    Yeah, I also heard ideal temp for them was around 71F. But I heard they survived even in warm water (around 86F) in their wilderness (waterholes) of Africa as well. In fact, my x. laevis survived at 86F in summer.

  4. #4
    Jakub T
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    Default Re: great information

    For almost two years I have a pair of Silurana tropicalis and only male occasionally shown a willingness to breed. I think I need to make stimulation. I have a large plastic box, which will serve as a breeding tank. I'm going to imitate the dry and rainy season (as in Africa). First, for 4-6 weeks, I will keep them in an old water, allowed to evaporate naturally, without the filter, and fed occasionally, once or twice a week. Then I intend to do a lot water changes, add filtration and start feeding frogs heavily (earthworms, bloodworms, crickets). I heard that this method produces the desired results.

  5. #5
    froggin
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    Default Re: great information

    Quote Originally Posted by Jakub T View Post
    For almost two years I have a pair of Silurana tropicalis and only male occasionally shown a willingness to breed. I think I need to make stimulation. I have a large plastic box, which will serve as a breeding tank. I'm going to imitate the dry and rainy season (as in Africa). First, for 4-6 weeks, I will keep them in an old water, allowed to evaporate naturally, without the filter, and fed occasionally, once or twice a week. Then I intend to do a lot water changes, add filtration and start feeding frogs heavily (earthworms, bloodworms, crickets). I heard that this method produces the desired results.
    I am not familiar with breeding of Silurana tropicalis. It's said it is difficult to breed Silurana tropicalis, compared to Xenopus Laevis. Let us know if you successfully breed them. As for x. laevis, their could be various ways of breeding. Some people use fridges though I for one would not try it. My x. laevis bred almost everyday when the water temp drastically changed from around 62F to 71F in a day. At that time I fed them everyday. It seems temp change and nourishment are triggers when it comes to breeding of x. laevis.

  6. #6
    Moderator Jenste's Avatar
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    Default Re: great information

    For tropicalis, they do appreciate higher temperatures than laevis. I keep both at room temperature during the summer but install a heater in the tropicalis tanks during the winter.
    72 Gallon Bow - ACF and GF tank.
    26 Gallon Bow - ACF tank.

    20 Gallon Long - ACF tank.


    "If there were an invisible cat in that chair, the chair would look empty. But the chair does look empty; therefore there is an invisible cat in it." C.S. Lewis, Four Loves, 1958

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