took on an albino pac man frog and a nightmare ratsnake lol he's nothing compared to my afrocks but bite bite lol






















Gorgeous frogs!Poison dart frog pics:
Dendrobates tinctorius "azureus". This pair are my most prolific breeders. I am always giving babies away.
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The little yellow frog is a Ranitomeya sirenis "highland." A very bold, very little frog.
I'm not really a fan of calling all the color forms of these frogs by their pet trade names, because in reality the many color forms of a single species are more of a cline where many of them intergrade, and they don't distinguish by color when mating, and it just contributes to inbreeding and line breeding in captivity (I notice these frogs have gotten smaller and smaller over years, compared to the first imported frogs). But this pair is a "green sipawilini" and "citronella". They are both Dendrobates tinctorius. This is a non-breeding pair (no eggs allowed to mature) because while I think they are genetically healthier, there isn't really a market for "impure" frogs that don't match confirmed wild phenotypes. (Even though in the wild, most D. tinctorius in any given site are a lot more diverse in pattern than in captivity.)
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I have bred one cross, for my own enjoyment. It is half "yellowback" and half "powder blue" and one of my favorite colored D. tinctorius. His name is "Lil guy."
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These being his parents:
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This unique one is a Dendrobates auratus "Rio Cascajal". I'm not convinced it is any genetically different from another identical morph imported around the same time called "Pena Blanca", but the two are being bred now as separate lines by hobbyists. I have it paired with an albino female, but they have never had fertile eggs.
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These are a "pair" of Ranitomeya variabilis "Southern." A little shy, but one of my favorites for pattern. They are both male, and I am seeking a female to join them.
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I have only one bumblebee dart frog, Dendrobates leucomelas "Fine Spot." He lives with "Lil Guy" and another D. auratus in a non-breeding group. Though members of this genus can hybridize, they don't really succeed in raising offspring without access to water.
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