They look to be spring peepers, Bill. Will know once they get their X. Previous thread - http://www.frogforum.net/other-frogs...tml#post225326

I loved my spring peepers and one thing I learned, they are only semi arboreal. How many do you have? I kept 7 of them in a 10 gallon until they were about 3-4 months old. I was worried that moving them to a bigger tank would make it really hard to find food.

In their first tank and then in their big tank, I had lots of leaf litter, moss and places to hide. Do not be surprised if they dig in. My biggest male made a home out of the area below the water dish. He would hide underneath it with just his little face poking out to watch for me to feed them. They used pretty much the entire tank, jumping on the big flat leaves in their first tank and loving the ficus I had in the second tank. Do not completely discount a bromeliad. They loved to tuck in the leaves and soak in any water that got caught in there.

Once they're all morphed, make sure the water is really shallow. Those little guys can drown really easily. I kept the water shallow enough that it only covered their bodies, not their heads at all.

Also, these guys take a long time to reach a size where they no longer need fruit flies. Mine never took anything bigger than a very small cricket. By 8 weeks old they were eating 100+ fruit flies a day. I tried to do pinheads, but the fruit flies were much easier to have on hand. Even when they were big enough for small crickets, they still preferred the fruit flies. I had anywhere between 6 and 10 cultures going at a time the entire time I had them. (I purchased pre-made cultures as the ones I made always seemed to crash)

I had them for just over a year before I lost them all, I have no idea why they died. Typically, they live 2-4 years in captivity. There is still not a lot of info on the web about caring for them in captivity because they just do not do well in captivity usually. I loved my babies but I wouldn't have them again.

This thread has a good pic of their first viv, they were very happy in there and easily found any food they needed -- http://www.frogforum.net/tree-frogs/...-froglets.html