So many tiny frogs! How do you feed them all? You must have a tank full of Drosophila. It's hard to pick a favorite amoung the frogs and geckos, they're all so pretty!
Thanks, yeah he has escaped twice himself, they are definitely one of the harder animals to catch once they're out, no question there... both times it took at least 2 days to catch him. I have some eggs from my current pair, if you have some trouble finding one down the line I'd be willing to swap with you when they grow up so you have some fresh blood... sorry to hear about that.
The flies are cultured in 32oz deli cups, I make 3 cultures every 10 days or so which seems to be plenty for my collection.... way easier than going out to the store or culturing crix, only takes about 5 minutes to make them.So many tiny frogs! How do you feed them all? You must have a tank full of Drosophila. It's hard to pick a favorite amoung the frogs and geckos, they're all so pretty!
Cool... it is the 18" one. I'll have to start doing some research on the species you mentioned. Any basic tips for a total newb?Thanks! If it is the 12x12x18 size (not the 12x12x12), you could get away with a pair of thumbnails (R. imitator, R. variabilis, R. amazonica, R. vanzolinii, or similarly sized) pretty easily.. A couple of my imitator and amazonica pairs are breeding & doing very well in that size. Terrestrials (D. tinctorius, leucomelas, auratus etc) would need something with more groundspace
-try your hand at fly culturing before you get your frogs... it'll avoid a culture crash at a bad time. They aren't difficult at all once you get it right, but some people manage to crash their cultures when first getting started.Cool... it is the 18" one. I'll have to start doing some research on the species you mentioned. Any basic tips for a total newb?