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  1. #1
    frogeyes
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    Default Re: Red Eyed Tree Frog Beginner

    Quote Originally Posted by flybyferns View Post
    Hello
    I will get back to this post as I can't stand replying on my iPhone.
    I'm sure you have had quite a bit to read here.
    For now I have a few ?s for you.
    Do you have your frogs yet
    Have you purchased any plants. If so what one.
    Have you read the quarantine threads ?
    TTYL
    No, I don't have anything yet. I'm planning on getting the equipment and checking the humidity and heat for awhile before I get the frog. (How long should I wait to get the frog?)

    I have not read the quarantine threads yet, but I have quarantined fish before.

    Another question, maybe you can help me. I have an RO/DI unit for my reef tank, would this also apply to the frog? Should I use RO/DI water in the mister/fogger, as drinking water, etc?

  2. #2
    Moderator Lija's Avatar
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    Default Re: Red Eyed Tree Frog Beginner

    No you need regular tap water with water conditioner ( prime, aquasafe, anything similar) as a drinking water, they need minerals that are in there. You can also use bottled spring water. You can use distilled or ro water for your fogger.

    Check is thread http://www.frogforum.net/vivarium-te...hing-else.html
    Save one animal and it doesn't change the world, but it surely changes the world for that one animal!

  3. #3
    Moderator LilyPad's Avatar
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    Default Re: Red Eyed Tree Frog Beginner

    Welcome to FF!! I am considering venturing into the world of RETF's also

    I would not use a fully glass top. Tree frogs need ventilation, I would try to make it at least 50% screen and mist regularly to keep the humidity up.

    Here is the link to the care sheet that Lija was talking about - Frog Forum - Red-Eyed Leaf Frog/Red Eyed Tree Frog Care - Agalychnis callidryas

    If you take a look through the vivarium section, there are some pretty great vivs to give you some ideas. I would recommend doing a drainage layer under some sort of substrate. That way you won't have to change out the substrate regularly because it's turned into a swamp and you can get live plants in there to help keep the humidity levels stable.
    2.0.3 Hyla versicolor "Eastern Gray Tree Frogs"
    2.2.0 Agalychnis callidryas "Red Eyed Tree Frogs"

    0.0.3 Dendrobates auratus "Turquoise and Bronze"
    0.0.1 Anaxyrus fowleri "Fowler's Toad"



  4. #4
    frogeyes
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    Default Re: Red Eyed Tree Frog Beginner

    Quote Originally Posted by LilyPad View Post
    Welcome to FF!! I am considering venturing into the world of Red-Eyed Leaf Frog's also

    I would not use a fully glass top. Tree frogs need ventilation, I would try to make it at least 50% screen and mist regularly to keep the humidity up.

    Here is the link to the care sheet that Lija was talking about - Frog Forum - Red-Eyed Leaf Frog/Red Eyed Tree Frog Care - Agalychnis callidryas

    If you take a look through the vivarium section, there are some pretty great vivs to give you some ideas. I would recommend doing a drainage layer under some sort of substrate. That way you won't have to change out the substrate regularly because it's turned into a swamp and you can get live plants in there to help keep the humidity levels stable.

    Thanks for for the reply. For the substrate I was going to use aquarium gravel on the bottom, then ecoearth, and some sphagnum moss on top. Do you think this would be okay?

  5. #5
    Moderator LilyPad's Avatar
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    Default Re: Red Eyed Tree Frog Beginner

    I have used gravel in the bottom layer of a viv in the past. Using hydroton is much easier to work with in my opinion. Your tank comes out much lighter than when gravel is used, plus you can use less. Gravel will work though. I put the sphagnum moss below the eco earth and leaf litter on top though. That just lowers the risk of your frog getting a mouthful of it but helps maintain the humidity. I would also recommend putting some screen down so that the eco earth doesn't just end up mixing with whatever you use for drainage. Other people here use egg crate and skip any kind of gravel or hydroton altogether, that seems to work well. Make sure you either put a pump in the bottom layer or some tubing for siphoning to drain excess water if you can't drill a hole to do that.
    2.0.3 Hyla versicolor "Eastern Gray Tree Frogs"
    2.2.0 Agalychnis callidryas "Red Eyed Tree Frogs"

    0.0.3 Dendrobates auratus "Turquoise and Bronze"
    0.0.1 Anaxyrus fowleri "Fowler's Toad"



  6. #6
    BArnold
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    Default Re: Red Eyed Tree Frog Beginner

    Hi,

    Red eyes are awesome. I got three back in Feb and I just got two (supposed to be three but one was DOA) on Tuesday. I have one albino, one leutino and three regular, I also have two gray tree frogs that I got as tadpoles and are barely turning into froglets. I am not an expert but I can give some tips that I have found along the way and tell you what I have done so far. I haven't read all the comments but I did read that you were going to do a glass top, red eyes need a lot of ventilation and so a screen top is best. As for keeping in the humidity, what I have done is made the bottom of my tank rocks with water and added a filter that pumps the water up and it trickles down the plants, I also put a little wash cloth towel over the back half of the screen top and that helps keep it in with some ventilation also. I have fake plants suctioned on top of the glass and I have arranged it sort of like a canopy that you would find in a rainforest. Then I have wood (make sure it is not grapewood, I had that at first, it grows a dangerous mold when in wet environments, ghost wood and mopani wood are good) for them to perch on and live plants in the rocks below. As you have probably read you will need a dish for them to soak in, I still need one even though I have water on the bottom because they prefer to use it, idk y. I used to feed their crickets straight into the tank, but a lot of them would swim and burrow into the rocks and start to get weird, so now I do the bowl method where you put them in a glass (or plastic) bowl that they can't climb out of. Occasionally they will hop out, but a couple isn't as difficult to deal with. I had substrate once, I used eco earth coconut fiber. I have a heating pad that I put at the top of the back of the tank, since they are arboreal it makes more sense for it to be up where they will be sleeping, but they don't sleep there anymore, just when they were little. They don't require lighting, but I am going to get a light that will help my plants grow. I just keep them by the window so they get the natural cycle and whatnot. The heater to the room is also there so it helps when the room feels chilly. Humidity, mine stays around 78%, and the temp, stays around between 70 and 80 degrees. This may not be what people say it should be at, but my frogs are happy and growing like weeds, so it works for them. For the background I have the regular exo terra styrofoam background, but once my new frogs come out of QT and go with the others I hope to practice some cork bark backgrounds and do something cool with some plants and moss in it. There are YouTube videos of some setups that I have gotten some ideas from, since you have some experience with fish, setting up a frog tank will probably be pretty fun. As for the fogger, I feel like that is more a dart frog thing, They look cool and keep humidity but I think the monsoon one would probably be more natural for the tree frogs. Either probably work. I didn't want to spend the money on it so I made the makeshift waterfall trickle system that I have. As for water I put tap water in gallon jugs and let it sit for at least a day to dechlorinate it, even with seven frogs I don't go through it that fast except when I change the water bottom (I usually empty 50% every week or two using the tube connected to the pump). I also use it to fill their water dish and to mist. People say to use distilled water to mist to avoid water marks on the glass, probably a good idea, but I don't notice a problem, I clean the glass with a wet paper towel whenever I see it getting dirty. I am not sure if I covered everything. Hope it all works out! My red eyes have so much personality, you will love them.

    Bridgett

  7. #7
    frogeyes
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    Default Re: Red Eyed Tree Frog Beginner

    Thanks for the replies everyone. Sorry I haven't been replying. I've been busy working on the enclosure. I decided to go with the "great stuff" style background as well as a false bottom. Let me know what you think. I plan on using the Repti-Fogger which will fog through 3 different spots custom built into the background. Tank is a 55 gallon standard.
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