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My aquarium is 10 gallons, 2 months old, and has 5 adult guppies in it and 1 baby guppy. I have 3 plastic plants in there, and a thing that blows bubbles, if I lowered the water level, and put something where the frog could get to the surface, would it be OK to put some tree frogs in there?

2006-11-04 04:27:15 · 7 answers · asked by Cody 1 in Pets Fish

7 answers

There are a certain kind of frogs that you can get a pet stores that live in water and come up to get air. Those are not tree frogs. If you lower the water in your aquarium of that size there will not be enough for your fish to stay healthy. Why not enjoy the tree frogs when they decide to greet you. What would you feed them? And how sad to limit them to just a little dry area in the tank. Also, as you no doubt know, they have little suction cups on their feet making it easy to escape from your aquarium. Bad idea.

2006-11-04 04:52:21 · answer #1 · answered by Linda R 7 · 2 0

Salt: many people use it, many don't. the alternative is yours. i do no longer use it and in no way run into wellness subjects, no longer for 14 years working now. so a approaches as i'm in touch the greater property you initiate dumping into your water, the greater complicated you're making it, and the greater can pass incorrect. shop it straight forward - all the failings approximately fish that salt is asserted to help would not must be helped whilst the fish are already healthful and freed from rigidity. PH: in case you purchase straight forward chemical components from the shop it is going to upload factors to the water to objective and rigidity the PH down. each and every little thing interior the water that made it severe interior the 1st place will nonetheless be there, and the two will combat one yet another - the water unavoidably wins. one element it somewhat is worse then having a PH too severe, is having one risky. the sole good decision you have is to apply distelled or opposite Osmosis taken care of water mixed along with your faucet water to realize the wanted consequences. including a filter out crammed with peat moss can help some, yet will additionally turn the water orange. Driftwood can help, however the quantity you may intend to make it paintings is greater then the tank might carry.

2016-12-28 12:38:39 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Tree frogs are not aquaetic, so they need land. Plus you would have to catch bugs for it too eat. They are better off in the wild where they belong. Maybe get a dwarf aquetic frog at your local petstore, they usually aren't more then $5 each and they eat fish food.

2006-11-04 04:29:59 · answer #3 · answered by pharfly1 5 · 4 0

No, tree frogs are not aqautic. You can get fully aquatic African dwarf frogs at the petstore. If you want tree frogs, don't take them from the wild - you can get a vivarium and buy some from the petstore.

That's cool that you get tree frogs on your windows, though. All we have where I live are toads.

2006-11-04 09:52:11 · answer #4 · answered by lickitysplit 4 · 0 0

Leave them in the wild, it's where they belong and you don't know what possible illness they carry.

Also, this should be a bit obvious but TREE frogs arn't aquatic.

2006-11-04 04:33:23 · answer #5 · answered by gitana_diosa 3 · 4 0

no, because they are land frogs and will die if you put them in water!!i should know becasue i tried and the little froggie dies the next day!!

2006-11-04 04:33:34 · answer #6 · answered by kortnie_cowgirl 1 · 0 1

sure

2006-11-04 04:34:16 · answer #7 · answered by gallow 5 · 0 3

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