Remove soiled bedding and stale food daily. Spot clean several times weekly or more often as needed. The entire cage should be cleaned and sanitized at least monthly. Clean enclosure and any décor with a 3% bleach solution, distilled vinegar and water (50/50), hydrogen peroxide, or pet-safe cleaning products.
Most frogs can be offered many different insects (crickets, cockroaches, mealworms, mosquito larvae, earthworms, fruit flies) and larger frogs can be offered very occasionally, frozen and defrosted pinky mice.
Affection no but like others said they do associate you with food and I like to think they develop a bond with you. They go from skittish and jumpy when you first interact with them to just kinda like "what up you got crickets?" Thats my favorite part.
A well-balanced African Dwarf Frog diet consists of:
- Bloodworms, brine shrimp and mysis shrimp (frozen).
- Sinking fish food pellets.
Once a baby frog is big enough to eat live prey they begin with small bugs like fruit flies, mosquitoes, and springtails. As the frog grows it will begin eating bigger things. Small worms, flies, spiders, and other bugs become suitable sources nourishment. Baby frogs in captivity eat small insects as well.
Imagine a slice of the jungle in your living room! Live exotic plants, a water feature, and colorful, active frogs will attract attention and make a great focal point in any living space. While most frogs will not tolerate regular handling, there is still plenty of opportunities to enjoy your pet frogs!
The Best Pet Frogs For Beginners
- Horned Frogs (Ceratophrys sp.) Also known as Pacman frogs these are a large ground-dwelling species that love to burrow into soil or moss.
- Gray Tree Frogs (Hyla chrysoscelis)
- Dart Frogs (Dendrobates sp.)
- Red eye tree frog (Agalychnis callidryas)
- Whites tree frogs (Litoria caerulea)
Adult frogs can survive for extended periods (3–4 weeks) without feeding if their quarters are clean, but long-term survival requires feeding the equivalent of 10–12 full-grown crickets two to three times a week.
If left alone without a proper lid your dwarf frog could definitely jump out of the tank. Because African dwarf frogs can't last more than 20 minutes outside of a tank before they start dehydrating and dying. In the wild, this wouldn't be an issue because if they jump out they can just as easily get back in.
To answer the original poster, frogs aren't social animals, except under very specific conditions (breeding for example). So no, they don't get lonely.
Unfortunately no, it's actually recommended that you don't remove African dwarf frogs from the tank, hold them, or pet them in any way. African dwarf frogs are strictly meant for being looked at, not handled. Even the oils on your hands can hurt these African dwarf frogs. This is how sensitive they are.
There are two explanations for your frogs getting "fat", bloating or ready to lay eggs. I keep ACFs and a couple of my females became huge. After a few days they shrunk back to normal. The eggs were not fertile.
African dwarf frogs prefer a temperature of about 78 F (about 26 C), and they need a temperature of at least 75 F (about 24 C). Therefore, if you're like most people, your ADF habitat needs an aquarium heater to keep the water warm enough for the frogs to be healthy and happy.
Frogs do indeed eat goldfish -but only younger, littler goldfish, or those that swim too slowly. They will leave alone goldfish that are larger. Frogs also do not generally eat Orfe or Koi.
Feed juveniles daily, adults every other day. Sprinkle food with calcium supplement daily and a multivitamin supplement once or twice a week.
How long does a frog live?
Common toad: 10 – 12 years
Can a frog drown? Yes, frogs have lungs like we do and if their lungs fill with water, they can drown just like us. Frogs can also breathe through their skin. They use their skin to absorb oxygen when underwater, but if there is not enough oxygen in the water, they will drown.
Dwarf frogs will eat fish flakes readily, but relish the occasional live treat, like blood worms, brine shrimp or mosquito larvae.
African Dwarf frog and Betta fish can live side by side in the tank as mates provided that you know how to handle them. While the frog is peaceful and calm, the fish is somehow aggressive and pesky but with time they both get along very well.
All African dwarf frogs will float at the surface, especially at night, this is nothing to worry about. You only have to worry if they are trying to ESCAPE the water, that is a sign of chytrid.
Some types of aquatic frogs bury themselves in the mud and spend the winter hibernating at the bottom of lakes and ponds.
African Dwarf FrogFemales are usually larger than males, but without a known-gender comparison frog on hand, that fact's of little use. Lift the frogs up and look for signs of a white bump on the back of each front leg. This subdermal gland indicates a male.
African Dwarf Frogs are some of the most popular additions to tanks. If you have too many fry guppies in a tank, add some African Dwarf Frogs and they'll eat guppy fry to ease the population. But, if you aren't using them to control a guppy population, these frogs can be more difficult to feed.
They don't make any noise, except for a slight humming noise underwater every once in a while, which is their form of singing. Because they are aquatic frogs, they stay underwater.
African dwarf frogs especially love plants in their tanks, whether living or artificial. They'll sit on the leaves for a swim break.
It is recommended that you have at least 3 gallons per frog, but I really wouldn't keep one in anything less than 5 gallons. If you want more than one frog, you're going to need at least a 10 gallon.
Light is really important; they are nocturnal animals and are used to a 10-12 hour cycle of light and darkness. These frogs need water or a very humid environment to survive. As with all the fish, it is best to set up the tank, and create the right environment before purchasing the frog.
Fish food usually makes them sick and kills them. Their diet is strictly bloodworms or shrimp. If you see them at the surface of the water it usually means they have a fungal infection so take them out immediately or it will spread to the others, same with the ones who sit on the out-take value.
African dwarf frogs can be raised on live baby brine shrimp. Like all amphibians African dwarf frogs shed their skin as they grow, more often when young and maybe once a month when grown. This is normal and they often eat the skin. Presumably, eating the skin returns some of the nutrients to the frog.
You don't need to buy an air pump unless you want bubbles in the tank. They're not necessary with African dwarf frogs.
They'll go after the bigger shrimp, may not eat them but can definitely severely injure.
They will sometimes eat baby snails or snail eggs. In other cases, African Dwarf Frogs will not bother freshwater snails in the tank. Even if they can fit them in the mouth, their hard shells will discourage them.
ADF are a bit blind so they may see other fish movements as food, this does mean they can nip and attempt to eat fish. It can also mean they are out competed for food by fish, especially fast, active moving fish like a tetra. They also eat shrimp so yeah the frogs are suspect for the disappearing shrimp.