Grays have bright yellow thighs. Greens and barking treefrogs are attractive as well.
Grays have bright yellow thighs. Greens and barking treefrogs are attractive as well.
The more interactive tree frogs tend not to be very showy in colour. I like the fact that my Gray Tree Frogs can be dark brown one day and white the next.
Founder of Frogforum.net (2008) and Caudata.org (2001)
what about cleaning waste and what not, is it hard to do? or since i want a complete water bottom will it most likely fall into it and get cleaned up by the filters and water changes?
and you said i need to take them out to feed them, i'm guessing all you guys feed them are crickets? how often and what do you feed the crickets?
i saw a bowl that hangs in the terrarium, what about using this to feed them in the terrarium if i pull the legs off the crickets of something, or is that just too cruel to think of lol
Crickets can still climb, fall into the water, and drown. Yes, the filter and water change will help keep the poop from becoming a problem.
i guess i could just feed them in a sterilite box, is it a daily feed? and i think i've seen that you guys dust them with calcium? is that also daily?
the litoria family springs to mind, If you've never had frogs then the Whites tree frog Litoria caerulea is a very hardy frog indeed. They take minimal looking after but things can go wrong with them just like with any amphibian. There tree frogs so they can both swim and climb. Enjoying both. meaning you could run a very shallow tank Up to 6" of water with some high exposed land done with a divide, and a high waterfall/log.
For something that would allow a larger area of water and less dry land or high areas then fire belly toads Bombina bombina are a good starting point with amphibians. There a communal frog with a brilliant red black underbelly and if you get an orental one they should have striking green and black uppers. The ones sold as European tend to be brown and black uppers. They love to swim and you can happily have a tank filled 2/3 to the top with water. Then make a shelf with clear plastic and aquarium seal it in place. With some substrate this gives the frogs somewhere to sit and feed, but a lot of space to swim. I have mine in a 2 foot tank with 2 shelves both shelves been about 8 inches into the tank with a lip to hold back substrate. Unfortunately mine developed a taste for small fish and 2 of them managed to eat 30 tetras, gold fish and guppies in the space of 4 months! Larger fish would stop this.
Terrestrial frogs tend to be bad swimmers. Pacmans for example will drown pretty easy so you want them keep them in a Non aquatic environment.
Tree frogs tend to be able to swim or get out of water, some will go for a swim others will not bother, But there feet generally mean they can escape the water.
Semi aquatic frogs tend to either like more land or more water depending on species and frog. Bombinas are one of the easiest to please in this regard, there also very quiet when they call sounding like small dog toys!!
Totally aquatic frogs will never leave the water at all. So having land can be a waste.
Bombina bombina would be my choice again for a first frog. Or litoria caerulea for a tree frog. There's a whole world of information for them on the net. Provided you stick to the basics and use the internet like a tool then neither frog will have many problems.
On a final note unless you are confident in keeping a live plant enclosure, have done it in the past or have a test tank that has been setup and running for a few months then stick to silks. Live plants have cost me a frog recently and i feel although they look great they fall into the expert level of care level. For a beginner stick to silk plants and coconut fibre substrate.
If you can get hold of them you could try a species of Reed Frog! They are quite small however, and whilst you may see them resting during the day they are primarily nocturnal.
Also they require small food e.g. flies/small crickets and the chances are if these fell into the water your fish would enjoy them too!
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