A couple of bad shots

froggy

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Chris Michaels
Here are a couple of very poor shots of a few of some of my animals (I;ve just put some pics of my A. opacum in the mole salamander section). The Hypselotriton orientalis is a 4 year-old CB female, who shares a tank with three WC animals (rescues, which have now recovered from sores etc and the females of which are breeding) and a half-sib male.

The Pelophylax esculentus (edible frogs) were lab rescues from excess stock (not for any of my work!) due to be culled.

I also have some I. a. apuanus and Xenopus muelleri, but they weren't co-operating.

C
 

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  • Pelophylax 1.JPG
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  • pelophylax 2.JPG
    pelophylax 2.JPG
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Nice, Chris :)
I can´t imagine what it must be to have Pelophylax around all day, though....they are noisy things xD They must be loving that aquaterrarium.
Are the apuanus kept in similar containers?
 
Thanks - I quite like the periodic chuckles, burbles, grunts and roars! I will hibernate them next winter and try to get some breeding going. The only female (out of 4 frogs) is very fat (partially because she is so tame and greedy that she gets a lot of the food whle the males dive at my approach) so I have high hopes for lots of spawn! The setup has a small filter that you can't see, and also requires three-bucket water changes every other day. They are very messy animals, and crickets are also very good at drowing themselves!
The frogs are in the largest really useful box model (150litres, I think), with the lid modified. My apuanus larvae are in a series of smaller RUBs (18 litres), but I want to upgrade them to deeper tanks at some point to increase volume without increasing footprint. The subadults are in a standard glass aquarium, which will also need to increase in size soon as they are growing so well!
I will tryt o get soem pictures of the apuanus soon

C
 
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  • Katia Del Rio-Tsonis:
    Dear All, I would appreciate some help identifying P. waltl disease and treatment. We received newts from Europe early November and a few maybe 3/70 had what it looked like lesions under the legs- at that time we thought maybe it was the stress of travel- now we think they probably had "red leg syndrome" (see picture). However a few weeks later other newts started to develop skin lesions (picture enclosed). The sender recommended to use sulfamerazine and we have treated them 2x and we are not sure they are all recovering. Does anyone have any experience with P. waltl diseases and could give some input on this? Any input would be greatly appreciated! Thank you.
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  • Katia Del Rio-Tsonis:
    sorry I am having a hard time trying to upload the pictures- I have them saved on my hard drive... any suggestions-the prompts here are not allowing for downloads that way as far as I can tell. Thanks
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    Katia Del Rio-Tsonis: sorry I am having a hard time trying to upload the pictures- I have them saved on my hard... +1
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