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Where are your sources that they do travel?
i've never seen a study concerning the movements of frogs and toads except during breeding migrations. Those were personal observations, along with other observations from other people and a few books.
I'm not saying enclosure size doesn't matter, I'm just saying that I (and many other people) have kept adult grays in ten gallon vivariums with virtually no problems. If you want to project yourself onto a frog (which is, frankly, an unintelligent and extremely apathetic animal) and give it a super sized enclosure so it will be "happier", go ahead but don't try to discourage other people from keeping them by pushing your unfounded opinion.
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This isn't my thread.
I am aware that toads are fairly intelligent, at least by amphibian standards, but they're still really dumb compared to any mammal or bird. Even some insects such as solitary wasps display the same capability for learning and even simple problem solving. Toads are still just ambush predators, concerned only with breeding, eating and staying hidden. They don't exhibit complex social or territorial behavior, they barely hunt, and they certainly don't need cognitive enrichment to be happy. For a frog or toad, "Not diseased, injured, starving or in immediate peril" (or what is perceived as immediate peril) almost certainly translates to the same thing as "happy."
Saying that frogs have "territories covering miles" is an extremely wild claim and I have personally witnessed evidence that it is not true.
Take a look a the snake keeping hobby. Snakes move around all the time when they want to eat or breed. They cross roads and enter houses in search of prey, places to bask or hibernate, and mates. But what a snake really wants to do is curl up in a warm, safe hole or under a rock and digest its latest meal. In captivity, hobbyists keep and breed snakes in tiny containers that they can't even stretch to their full length in- yet they're perfectly happy. They might roam in search of resources in the wild, but in captivity where they have all of their feeding, temperature and breeding needs hand delivered to them in a small, safe space they never feel the need to go anywhere and are perfectly content. I'm not saying this is the same for frogs and toads, they are very different from snakes and certainly need some space to move around but it's just an example of how captivity and the wild can be very different places even for the same wild animal.
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And take a look at the way this university suggests rearing grays: (for laboratory research, not pets)
http://www.biosci.missouri.edu/gerha...0husbandry.pdf
by our standards, this approach is positively spartan, and I would go so far as to say the frogs might not be as "happy" as they would be in a large, naturalistic vivarium. But clearly they've had success with it, and the frogs have all their basic food, moisture and sanitation needs met and it's entirely possible that they don't notice or care about the difference.
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You are right, snakes prefer to curl up and sleep. Frogs like to jump, hunt and explore. I kept two whites in a 10 gallon for a while and they both nearly rubbed their noses off. Their colors were dark and mottled as well.now, in a 65 gal, their noses are perfectly intact and their colors are a even blue to green. So does tank size make a difference? Yes it does. Just because an animal can survive, you won't see it's true capabilities until you help it thrive.
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did you read the end of my post?
the frog I'm talking about keeping in ten gallons are gray tree frogs, which are about a third the size of whites. I've never had issues with nose rubbing, only two short, isolated incidents with feeding, and their colors are usually fine.
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They may be smaller, but they still need the same amount of space. All tree frogs despite the type need as much space as you can give them. If you can't give them at least 20 gallons, you should not own tree frogs. Oh, and did you read the end of my post?
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