I just noticed that you are in CA. Temp and humidity triggers color change in these guys, both of these conditions probably change more often and more extreme for you than here in WA. Normally the ones here keep their color and change shade from light to dark. She is very pretty.
Hello,
Yes I'm in the Santa Cruz/Monterey CA area that normally stays cool year round highs normally in the 60's. This week it's been unusually warm in the 80's. And I spotted Pako while watering my flowers. If you look at her really closely in the pictures when she is the light tan, you can see the faint dark markings on her back that become black when she turns green.
She is very friendly too, doesn't seem scared of us at all.
I've seen Yoki change shades, but not go from beige to green at all. That must be quite interesting to see. Pako is a very cute little frog-I hope she sticks around for a bit!
I hope she sticks around too. We are getting a bit attached to her now, especially since my son named her..)
I was getting worried about her, since it got soo hot outside, so I started researching on the internet and found this site. I placed a small dish of water about 1/2 inch deep or so outside, but she doesn't seem interested in it. I'm hoping that there is enough food (bugs) for her to find on my balcony. Should I try to get some bugs for her? Crickets or something from a pet store?
I don't have a container to put her in to keep her inside, and she seems soo happy outside, I hate to disturb her.
Frogs usually stick around a food source, so if she is hanging out there, I am sure she is finding something to eat. I'm positive she wouldn't mind a cricket or two, but if you let them go on your balcony, you might find a cricket or two inside! Nothing like waking up with a cricket in your bed! As long as she doesn't look skinny, I wouldn't worry too much. Personally, I am all for keeping wild frogs in the wild, but if a frog is injured, hungry or in other danger, I'm a sucker and usually bring it in. For now, I think she quite likes hanging out. And kudos to your son for picking such a great name!!
UPDATE>>>UPDATE
I now have TWO Pacific Chorus Frogs. Just took pictures and will post. One is green looks like a male, darker throat with wrinkles, and the second is the same tan/brown one that I had seen turn green, she is smaller than the male green one.
Maybe they are on their honeymoon.....
Good luck sleeping tonight!![]()
The green male's name is "Niko", and the brown female is "Pako"...named by my 4year old son Aidan.![]()
Tonight at dusk Niko is going to try and impress Pako with how loud he can get, and he can get loud!!!
Cool names! I might need your son's help in naming one of mine-lol. Yoki has woken up my daughter at 2 AM and her bedroom is on the opposite side of the house and she always has her door closed. Plus the t.v. was on AND the neighbours dog was going. But it is an amazing sound-once you hear it, you will fall in love with these little frogs even more.
Thank you Jo Anna! My son is really enjoying these little frogs!
Quick questions for you guys, if I may. Sorry for my noviceness(is that a word?)
What does "gut-load" a cricket mean? Do they really eat 50-70 fruit flies per frog every other day? WOW!!
What is the life span of a Pacific Chorus Frog?
Thanks for any comments!
Replied to on your other thread.
Paul,
How solid is this "xenophobia" and is there any indication what causes it?
In Other Words, " Are there any species that they will tolerate? " and " What is it that let's the PCF's know that another species is using a particular water feature, so the PCF's don't lay eggs in it ? "
Last edited by Chopper Greg; July 25th, 2010 at 04:56 PM. Reason: Clarification of question.
Starting with the obvious they have eyes, so they of course can see fish or other predators in the water. Anything else would depend on the species, for instance a giant water bug will give off a chemical signature that will cause the frogs to avoid laying eggs in the water. if you don't care about breeding you can keep a completely aquatic species in with them. I have kept Rough Skinned Newts with my PCFs in a large enclosure and they did fine with the aquatic ones but were skittish around the terrestrial ones. The focus of this article is the care of Pacific Chorus Frogs so the best possible environment is presented. The degree of degredation by adding other species is up to the keeper. It is best to keep species seperate.
Then they have better eyes the I - I'm lucky if I can see a 6 inch fish, unless it is just under the surface.
That was the part that I was wondering about - I wonder if the PCF's would know a danger if they have not encountered it before - I do know that like some other frogs, if 1 tad gets injured, there appears to to be a chemical that is released in to the water, signaling danger, and suddenly all the other tads are undergoing metamorphose.
Thats just it, I do care about breeding, but I also care about having multi-species tank ( can I say multi-species tank on this forum? ).
I just don't have a lot of room for multiple tanks, so I carefully select species for compatibility, and as I generally prefer native species over exotics, I have been speculating on the use of one of the small native fish that normally feed on insect larva small enough small enough to make PCF tads look big by comparison.
I understand - please do not take my data of joining as my experience level, for I have been doing tanks for more than 15 yrs now - a multi-species tank is never anything to lightly under take, requiring time to study the species under consideration to make sure that they are compatible, thus while I have had PCF's before as a single species ( and would like to have them again ),
I am here now to get as much information as I can in evaluating them for 240 gal multi-species set up - another species under consideration for this tank is the Canyon Treefrog ( Hyla arenicolor )similar in size and temperament to the PCF, but also like the PCF, there is not a lot of information, available on them ( in some ways the Canyon Treefrog would actually be better as the tads get larger before metamorphose, but they are much harder to find than PCF's ).
I have never had them lay eggs in a water feature with fish or newts in it. I have literally bred thousands of PCF in a very successful 3 year re-introduction project and in the areas where they have been released I don't find PCFs breeding in the ponds that have newts present. This is just my experience with them, maybe yours will be different.
I'm not saying that it will work - only that I wonder about the specific mechanism that causes them to avoid inhabited waters, and if that mechanism can be short circuited.
On a separate note........
Last I heard, you were working on a way to ship egg's and larva - have you come up with a way to do so?
My bad.
It's great to see a care article on Pacific Chorus Frogs! I had these for years (including an old male named Igor who lived for 11+ years), and I found them to be wonderful animals! Back when I was caring for these, pesticides/herbicides were not widely used where I lived, so I mostly fed PCFs wild-caught worms/insects/spiders. Earthworms (cut to appropriate size) were the staple, even for new transformants, and then "field plankton" was used to diversify the diet. I generally don't mix species, but I had some success housing PCFs with one of the the local ambystomoids, the long-toed salamander (A. macrodactylum). The PCFs would breed fairly consistently in the presence of the salamanders, but of course, compatible sizes were important, and the salamanders needed to be well-fed or they would bite the PCFs... Anyway, great article!
Last edited by Paul Rust; September 9th, 2010 at 02:03 PM. Reason: Correction
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