You'll find through adequate research on this forum as well as all other frog related forum out there that mixing species is highly frowned upon and is just not a good idea for beginners. As I'm sure you've read frogs need specific environmental conditions met and even if two different species live in the same habitat in the wild they are not forced to live in close proximity to each other. Each frog has its own level of toxicity that its own species can live with. Introduce another species and they slowly poison each other. Or one frog is more bold or more dominate and out competes the less bold species for food or space. The less dominate frog may feel slightly intimidated and not live a normal active life and then wither away. Keep them separate and learn about your frogs in their normal routine not something forced upon them.
I had one lone Red Eye for a couple of years, then I added others. Ive learned so much more about them as they interact with each other as they would with their own kind in nature. Remember to always quarantine new frogs for at least 30 days preferably longer. It would also be best to spend some more time just caring for the one frog before you venture into a group of them.





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