The Reptile House
General Care Of Dendrobate, Poison Dart Frogs
By Devin Edmonds
Many times when you open an amphibian book, the first picture is of some
gorgeous tropical looking
frog. These frogs are usually some sort of poison dart frog. The genus of
Dendrobate is one of the
more common genuses in poison dart frogs so I thought I would cover the basic
care of them. It is
also the genus I have had the most book info and experience with.
There are 26 species of Dendrobate, almost all of which are brightly colored.
The more common
ones in captivity are Dendrobates auratus, D. tinctorius, D. leucomelas and D.
pumilio.
Dendrobates auratus grows to 5 cm. but most will only reach 3 or 4 cm. They
vary in color from
black with green blotches, to black with green spots, to black and blue, and
some even have brown
lines or spots on them.
Dendrobates tinctorius is one of the largest poison dart frogs, growing to
around 4 or 5 cm. on
average, but there are some that may grow to 6 cm. There are so many forms or
morphs of this frog
that it would take pages to describe them all (check out this link Dendrobates
Tinctorious color giude
), so I will only mention the more common ones. The cobalt form of D.
tinctorius is black with yellow
stripes flowing down its back and down its side. The legs are blue. The yellow
back form is black
with a bright yellow back that has two "drops" of yellow trailing off of the
back down the sides. The
powder blue form is black with white or very light blue stripes and small
spots all over its back. The
legs are light blue with black spots.
Dendrobates leucomelas grows to around 3 or 4 cm. The juveniles are black with
yellow or orange
stripes running horizontally on their backs. When they turn into adults, some
of the stripes start
turning into spots. This is one of the better poison dart frogs for beginners.
Dendrobates pumilio is small, growing to only 2 or 3 cm. They are the most
variable of poison dart
frogs and can be in any color you imagine. The most common form is red with
blue legs. This is not a
good species for beginners.
After you have looked over the kinds of poison dart frogs and have decided
which kind you want to
get, you will need some sort of enclosure to put them in. I have a separate
page on how to make a
terrarium for them so I figure why write it twice. Here is a link dendrobate
cage or you can find the
other page under care sheets on my homepage. Make sure you know the proper
temperature for
your species of Dendrobate before you make the terrarium because it is hard to
lift a terrarium full of
plants and frogs to put an under tank heat pad on. Here are the common
temperatures of some
Dendrobate:
D. leucomelas 77F-83F
D. azureus 75F-81F
D. auratus 76F-80F
D. tinctorius 75F-80F
Some good plants to use in the terrarium are philodendron, pothos, any kind of
ivy and schefelaras.
You can also just go to your local plant store and select a few kinds of small
house plants and use
them.
Since all Dendrobates are small frogs they require small foods. Getting small
foods in large quantities
can be a hard task. The easiest way to do this is to start a culture and raise
your own.
Crickets are the most easily acquired food. Almost all pet shops should have
some for sale. The
problem is that not all have the very small ones, which are called pin-head
crickets. Eighth-inch
crickets are also ok for the frogs but pin-heads are the best. If the pet
shops in your city don't have
them, then you will most likely be able to special order some. If you still
can't do that then there is
always the possibility of mail ordering them yourself. Before feeding these to
your frogs you should
either "gut load" (also known as "power feeding") them or dust them with
vitamin and mineral
powder. All that "gut loading" is, is you feed your crickets some lettuce and
fish flake the night before
you give them to your frogs.
The next most common food for them is fruit flies. Always get the wingless
form of them instead of
the winged ones. They are vary easy to culture. There are suitable
instructions for making a culture at
A1 Reptiles (clicking on the link will take you to a different site).
My favorite food and the most easily cultured is spring tails. Spring tails
are very small white insects.
You can get a starter culture from ARIZONA DENDROBATE RANCH or The Dendrobate
Den .
Here are directions to culture them:
Materials needed: Small tupperware sandwhich box, African violot potting soil,
Fish food and spring
tails.
1. Take the tupper ware container and fill half or less of it with the potting
soil.
2. Trickle some water on top of the potting soil and stir it up so its
consistancy is like pie dough.
3. Add fish flake to the top of the potting soil and then add springtails.
4. Once your springtail culture is growing, separate part of it and put it
into a new culture.
Do not worry if white fuzzy mold appears over the top of the springtail
culture. The mold should go
away in a week. Now that you have the cultures going, the question is how do
you get the little bugs
out of there without squishing them. All you do is take a turkey baster and
blow some of the little
springtials out into your frogs' cage. If you want you can blow the
springtails into a small container so
you know how many you are putting in the cage.
There are some frogs that are not good for the beginner Dendrobate keeper. The
following is a list of
the species that are good for beginners and the species that aren't so good
for beginners.
Poison Dart Frogs That Are Good For Beginners
Dendrobates azureus (blue poison dart frog)
Dendrobates leucomelas (yellow-banded poison dart frog, bumble bee poison dart
frog)
Dendrobates auratus (Green & Black poison dart frog)
Dendrobates tinctorius (Dyeing poison dart frog)
Poison Dart Frogs That Are Not Good For Beginners
Dendrobates pumilio (strawberry poison dart frog)
Dendrobates histrionicus (harliquin poison dart frog)
Dendrobates lehmanni (lehmann's poison dart frog)
Here are some helpful links to poison dart frog and related sites:
ARIZONA DENDROBATE RANCH
The Blue Frog Page
Black Jungle Terrarium Supply
The Boa Barn's Frog Page
Classifieds
Dendrobates Tinctorious color giude
The Dendrobate Den
The Frog Factory
FrogNet Mailing List
Genus
Dendrobates
Poison Dart Frogs
R.J. Herpetological, Inc.
Reptilian Designs Directions
Dartboy
A.I.D.--- Amphibian Information Database
Vivaria Projects
DENDROBATES
By following the care outlined above and doing your "homework" on poison dart
frogs you can get
started into the hobby of poison dart frogs.
Care sheet by Devin Edmonds:Mantella Homepage
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