I was thinking the same thing about the exoskeleton... My 12 y/o cat who is missing 3 teeth has trouble chomping them down, I can't imagine feeding them to a froggy.
I was thinking the same thing about the exoskeleton... My 12 y/o cat who is missing 3 teeth has trouble chomping them down, I can't imagine feeding them to a froggy.
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The cane toads couldn't even reach the cane beetle so they weren't no help I they said I wouldn't take nothing from outside they could kill your frog with there pinchers
Obviously I'm refering to horned frogs considering I posted under this forum. I've currently been feeding them to my African Bullfrog without issue.
As far as parasites are concerned I've supplement the diets of many of my amphibians with purchased and wild collected food for years without issue and with great results. Collection location and knowledge of the species you're using as feeders is implied.
If you look up the species of beetle I'm referencing you'll see they have no large mandibles whatsoever. These frogs can easily handle them and much larger prey.
Additionally, I wasn't implying that the cane toads solved the issue, but stating that these types of beetles are a natural part of their diets.
Last edited by jelkins; June 6th, 2011 at 03:31 PM. Reason: addition
Justin, our members own many species of frogs, from thumbnail frogs to larger species like horned frogs.
In my neck of the wood, in Montreal, June Beetles are large and with a harder shell. It would not make a great meal for an American green tree frog, for example. As for feeding outside bugs, I know a very well known US breeder who decided to leave the hobby because of the threat of chytrid carried by some bugs... So there's definitely a risk factor, which readers should be aware of.
Eric
Once again. I posted under this forum refering to these types of frogs as is clearly stated in my second reply, not in the forum regarding general feeding and whatnot.
I'm sure something as big as a horned frog or a pyxie or something certainly COULD eat a june beetle, but it's not even recommended to feed meal worms as a staple (that's pretty universal) because they have harder parts on their exoskeleton that can cause issues over time, and june beetles have much harder exoskeletons than meal worms...
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