Very very impressive frogs. You're very lucky to have 3 with genetics to hit the 8" mark. I'm waiting for people to jump up and say you're lucky they're not dead from the diet you give them.![]()
Very very impressive frogs. You're very lucky to have 3 with genetics to hit the 8" mark. I'm waiting for people to jump up and say you're lucky they're not dead from the diet you give them.![]()
Chicks are actually a lot healthier then mice and rats, so I would hope no one would make that comment. I've been looking into feeding my big guy quail and chicks for awhile, Just cant find any place close.
My small male is going on ten years old and for the first 5 years I had him in college he was only fed mice weekly, granted the last 5 years he has been feed roaches only.
Eel Noob....Great pictures I really like Bruce.
No argument here. Chicks are much batter than rodents and contain far less fat. Also a little easier to digest. Noob knows what he's doing.
They look great Noob!
holy junks they are wide!! lol nice looking frogs![]()
I'm thinking of Quail Chicks not chickens. Sorry.Anyway, rodents also have a tendency to overload their system with protein causing a form of cloudy eye to form from the protein building up in the eye and if rodent are fed continually it will perminantly blind the frog. I've not heard this with feeding chicks, but it is possible with feeding your frog anything that can potentially overload their system with protein. Fat buildup like this can also occur.
Thanks for comments everyone. I'll get some update of Jack whenever he decide to wake up.
I have read similar information on to much protein causing harm to your frog and causing blindness, But i did a nutritional check on general insects such as worms and roaches and per weight and size insects have a significantly higher protein content then mice. (I based this off not for feeding your animals but a survival guide for humans.) so would how the frog digests vertebrates be the cause of this condition?
Actually quail have a higher fat content than either of them at 31.9%. I have seen only maybe one or two cases of the "cloudy eye" and I am very skeptical on it being because of a rodent diet, as they have less protein than insects of similar size. Phillipe de Vosjoli himself advocates a rodent only diet once they reach adulthood. As stated before, I have an ornata that is going on 7 years of a nearly rodent exclusive diet with zero problems whatsoever, and I remember Ed Clark fed everything he had rodent only diets, including his cornuta.
Philippe is where my info on protein overload causing blindness is coming from. You cannot compare the tissues of an insect to a mammal or avian tissues. They are more complex and more dense. Whether these breeders still practice these feeding techniques or not I don't know, but that came from Philippes mouth not his books. I'm not one to argue over such things or change how anyone feeds their animals. What you feed your pets is your choice. I'm just offering a precaution. I've seen quite a few frogs fed only rodent die before reaching their average lifespan. More so since I've been on here. What the rodents are fed prior to being offered as food is the ultimate factor that will determin their protein and fat content not just an empty mouse. They are gutloaded just as insects are. Feed them an abundance of protein rich foods and they will cause an overload.
Protein overload can lead to kidney and liver failure as well. Basically too much of a good thing is just as bad as not enough.
It's so confusing because there really is no definitive answer on the subject. This information has been floating around for years and unfortunately it really isn't worth it for researchers to do studies on it, since there likely wouldn't be any grants. Hopefully one day somebody can actually get a straight answer on the subject.
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