ChatterBank1 min ago
Another dead frog question...
15 Answers
Sorry to ride on the back or your post Horselady - but seeing your question reminded me of one I have been meaning to ask here....
A while back in the Summer - we were building a basement in our new house - and before the walls were waterproofed - there was water in there... and frogs.... One of the labourers collected the frogs up into a bucket.. and I gently poured them into the moat at the end of the garden. The water they came from - was just land drainage water... and rain water - not clean by any means! The water they went into was much the same.. but at ground level.
I thought I was being kind and saving them.. they all hopped into the moat and swam away.. and all promptly died!!! Literally.. I saw a few last bubbles come out of them and they all froze, stopped swimming and sank...
WHat on earth did I do wrong?
Poor Froggies!!
A while back in the Summer - we were building a basement in our new house - and before the walls were waterproofed - there was water in there... and frogs.... One of the labourers collected the frogs up into a bucket.. and I gently poured them into the moat at the end of the garden. The water they came from - was just land drainage water... and rain water - not clean by any means! The water they went into was much the same.. but at ground level.
I thought I was being kind and saving them.. they all hopped into the moat and swam away.. and all promptly died!!! Literally.. I saw a few last bubbles come out of them and they all froze, stopped swimming and sank...
WHat on earth did I do wrong?
Poor Froggies!!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Nosha123. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think the temp would have been more or less the same... but the basement water could have been more acidic or something.. and they had lived there quite happily.. but then I go and interefered by moving them...
Would they ever have adjusted - if I had let them go in the garden and not the moat's water?
there were about 10 in all! Every single one died in seconds!!!
Would they ever have adjusted - if I had let them go in the garden and not the moat's water?
there were about 10 in all! Every single one died in seconds!!!
***loud gasp and intake of breath*** NO NO I didnt mean it!!! what if I go to hell...
No.... or worse - what if I come back as a frog in the next life!!!!
Actually.. I was hoping someone might know why it happened... guess none of us will be claiming the Professor of all things Amphibious trophy this time around
;-)
No.... or worse - what if I come back as a frog in the next life!!!!
Actually.. I was hoping someone might know why it happened... guess none of us will be claiming the Professor of all things Amphibious trophy this time around
;-)
A bit late on this but here we go. The chances are that it could have been a multitude of factors...water temp, toxicity of water due to pH or agricultural run off. In fact your second instinct was probably correct. putting them into a shady, damp area of the garden would have been an easier adjustment. Although amphibians like frogs spend time in water they do in fact live most of the time in shady damp spots on dry land and really return to water to breed. It could have well been the dramatic adjustment from a dark cellar to a sunlit garden...frogs have very sensitive skin. Whichever, at least your intentions were good!
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