Where keeps Phyllobates lugubris and aurotaenia?
I have National Aquarium for lugubris and the Electric City Aquarium in Scranton for aurotaenia. Both are recorded on the forum under the common names I used.
Where keeps Phyllobates lugubris and aurotaenia?
I have National Aquarium for lugubris and the Electric City Aquarium in Scranton for aurotaenia. Both are recorded on the forum under the common names I used.

Which institutions keep Lehmann's?
One possible suggestion. If it's too much like work I completely understand that, but in future entries for the rare species, would it be at all possible to provide a list of what the 1-4 places they came up in the survey were? It wouldn't be the most useful for all the common species, and I don't think anyone needs a list of all the places that came up with, say, Green-and-Black Poison Dart Frogs, but for those species that are in only 1-4 zoos it'd be nice to incorporate a list because I know some of the species that've come up (such as Lehman's PDF) I didn't even realize were found in US zoos, and it'd be nice to see *who* has these rarer herps. If it's too much work to add this though, I completely understand.
Was curious about them because, for whatever reason, they're one of the two poison dart frogs in Planet Zoo. Odd choice by Frontier.
Are there any American institutions that keep rinkhals? Can't recall ever seeing them. Maybe under a different name?
Are there any American institutions that keep rinkhals? Can't recall ever seeing them. Maybe under a different name?
There's a few around
DAK also keeps this subspecies.There are several subspecies of Fire Salamander, but the only one I found that was listed at subspecies level was an S. s. bernardezi at the Saint Louis Zoo.
A lot of the rarer species are natives, which could potentially be subject to an undercount if a lot of nature centers have them. There's nothing I can do about this, and I don't feel comfortable saying "1 place has native species X" when that could be way off base.
They're rare, but yeah there is a couple of places that should currently have them on display.
Are there any American institutions that keep rinkhals? Can't recall ever seeing them. Maybe under a different name?
No Hymenochirus?
No Hymenochirus?
A search of the forums for the genus shows the only American mentions to be at the Bronx Zoo in 2015 and 2019 (the latter saying that they were no longer there [or not on display]).I noticed that too, I would have expected them somewhere.