Hi fellow Cornuta lovers out there!
I am guilty of purchasing Ceratophrys cornuta while thinking it's probably as easy to keep as the other Ceratophrys (ornata & cranwelli), but I was WRONG. In fact, way wrong!!! I bought a WC C. cornuta without proper research of the frog's diet on an impulse (I had not regret because Cornutas are so pretty and awesome) and now I'm trying to make it up to Grumpy (my lovely C. cornuta) by doing diet research.
Recently I found a paper on the biology of Ceratophrys cornuta and it gives us a good sense of what C. cornuta are eating in their native home range.
This is the citation of the paper:
"William E. Duellman and Miguel Lizana. 1994. Biology of a Sit-and-Wait Predator, the Leptodactylid Frog Ceratophrys cornuta. Herpetologica, Vol. 50, No. 1, pp. 51-64."
Let me know if you want the whole paper I can send it to you because not every can access to Journal of Herpetological without cost (I get it free via my school's network).
Here's a quote from the paper on diet:
"The most frequent items of prey, both in number and occurrence (but not by volume), were ants and beetles. Other important prey items, especially in occurrence, were orthopterans [grasshoppers], spiders, millipedes, and vertebrates. The latter includes a variety of frogs-Bufo typhonius (one), Eleutherodactylus toftae (one), Hamptophryne boliviana (three), Hyla parviceps (two), and H. punctata (one), one gymnopthalmid lizard (Ptychoglossus brevifrontalis), one lizard egg (Anolis fuscoauratus), one unidentified snake (a few vertebrae), and three mice, of which only one cricetid (Oecomys bicolor) could be identified. Large prey, especially vertebrates, usually were more decomposed than small prey; thus the volumes calculated for these probably is underestimated."
There’s also a pie graph in the paper (that I wish I could copy & paste) showing the volumetric percentages of prey items in the diet of C. cornuta: 53.05% consist of vertebrates (~25% mammals, ~20% frogs, ~8% reptiles), 22.4% were grasshoppers, 8.79% crabs (yes, crabs!), 3.95% millipedes, 3.27% spiders, 1.95% beetles, 0.52% ants, and 0.27% earthworms.
With diet consist of crabs, millipedes, ants (formic acid), and beetles these frogs have pretty much iron bellies in the wild... by the way this paper was done in the Amazonian Peru.
I guess these frogs are not strictly Anuran and reptile specialists, instead, they are opportunistic eaters like most large ambush predatory frogs are.