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Thread: Calling and temperature?

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    100+ Post Member elly's Avatar
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    Default Calling and temperature?

    Is there a connection between temperatures and frogs (especially WTFs) calling at night? I mean, yes, frogs would call in spring, but do they only call when the temperature gets over, say, 84F or do they do it at lower temperatures too?

    I was thinking my sub adult White's wasn't calling because he wasn't feeling well. I'd gotten the temperatures up to 77F at night, but the last two nights they've reached 84F and he called both times. (He also left me an enormous soft poop the first night. Maybe he was calling because he felt relieved?)

    Last night Julep joined in even though he's a baby. So great, two calling frogs are going to be egging each other on.
    Here's what it sounded like:

    Bonk: Wok-wok-WOK-WOK-WOK-WOK-WOK!
    ...
    Julep: wok-wok-wok?

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    100+ Post Member irThumper's Avatar
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    Default Re: Calling and temperature?

    Quote Originally Posted by elly View Post
    Is there a connection between temperatures and frogs (especially WTFs) calling at night? I mean, yes, frogs would call in spring, but do they only call when the temperature gets over, say, 84F or do they do it at lower temperatures too?

    I was thinking my sub adult White's wasn't calling because he wasn't feeling well. I'd gotten the temperatures up to 77F at night, but the last two nights they've reached 84F and he called both times. (He also left me an enormous soft poop the first night. Maybe he was calling because he felt relieved?)

    Last night Julep joined in even though he's a baby. So great, two calling frogs are going to be egging each other on.
    Here's what it sounded like:

    Bonk: Wok-wok-WOK-WOK-WOK-WOK-WOK!
    ...
    Julep: wok-wok-wok?
    You've joined the club!

    I'm still trying to figure out my guys' calling patterns too. They call at various times during the night or day... sHEila calls when he hears me talking loud to someone in the other room, or laughing, or if I'm trying to get him to talk... though that's been harder now since he's had Honey to converse with, lol. I've heard him answer geese, and the native frogs when they were "crrrkkkk"ing under the window-- ok sHEila is going off right now...!
    Wrong, sHEila's asleep, it was Honey! Temp in there right now is 77 F (typical daytime temp for them) and humidity is right around 50%. Sometimes I wonder if me typing from in here makes them start in, but I'm clear in the other room... I imagine their hearing is pretty darn good though!
    Mom to these fine frogs!
    4.4.0 White's tree frogs (Litoria caerulea): Sir Honey Lime, Bok & Choi, Martha, Shirley, Leapin' Loo and Ping & Pong; 0.2.1 Amazon Milk Frogs (Trachycephalus resinifictrix): Otto & Echo and Pip-Squeak aka Tiny
    2.0.0 South American Bird Poo Frogs (Hyla marmorata): Ribbit & Rupert


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    100+ Post Member elly's Avatar
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    Default Re: Calling and temperature?

    Hmm, so they call at lower temperatures then. Bonk rarely calls. Usually it's about once, at one o'clock in the morning.

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    100+ Post Member irThumper's Avatar
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    Default Re: Calling and temperature?

    Quote Originally Posted by elly View Post
    Hmm, so they call at lower temperatures then. Bonk rarely calls. Usually it's about once, at one o'clock in the morning.
    Lower than yours at any rate, but 77-80 F is tops for my guys. Mine don't seem to call when it gets below 73 F though. They just sit around tucked in and look asleep.
    Mom to these fine frogs!
    4.4.0 White's tree frogs (Litoria caerulea): Sir Honey Lime, Bok & Choi, Martha, Shirley, Leapin' Loo and Ping & Pong; 0.2.1 Amazon Milk Frogs (Trachycephalus resinifictrix): Otto & Echo and Pip-Squeak aka Tiny
    2.0.0 South American Bird Poo Frogs (Hyla marmorata): Ribbit & Rupert


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    100+ Post Member elly's Avatar
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    Default Re: Calling and temperature?

    They did it last night at 80F/26C. Julep's tiny hiccup is adorable.

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