Quick tree frog lighting question

Saark

Arachnosquire
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Hi all,

I have just adopted a trio of wee baby tree frogs, believed to be barking tree frogs. A friend brought a small plant home that she picked up in Florida only to discover some 10 days later that these little fellas hitchhiked on the plant! Anyway, I'll be putting them in the Exo Terra 12x12x18 terrarium and I need to add a UVB bulb. I'm looking at the Repti-Glo 5.0 UVB 100 tropical bulb but I'm not sure if I should go with the 13w or the 26w in this size tank. I have just a couple hours left to order from Amazon and still get the bulb before the weekend so any quick suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks
 

viper69

ArachnoGod
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Hi all,

I have just adopted a trio of wee baby tree frogs, believed to be barking tree frogs. A friend brought a small plant home that she picked up in Florida only to discover some 10 days later that these little fellas hitchhiked on the plant! Anyway, I'll be putting them in the Exo Terra 12x12x18 terrarium and I need to add a UVB bulb. I'm looking at the Repti-Glo 5.0 UVB 100 tropical bulb but I'm not sure if I should go with the 13w or the 26w in this size tank. I have just a couple hours left to order from Amazon and still get the bulb before the weekend so any quick suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks
Make sure those frogs require UVB. Second, know the distance of the bulb to where the frogs will be because UV bulbs are only effective at certain distances, so one bulb may be better than another.
 

BioTeach

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I would err on the side of caution and go with a plain old CF bulb of 13w or less. It has not been shown that tree frogs need UVB and could cause problems in those tight quarters. I did a lot of research before getting bulbs and decided to use 6700k 13w CF bulbs in my 12x12x18 gray tree frog Exo Terras.


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The Snark

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I would err on the side of caution and go with a plain old CF bulb of 13w or less. It has not been shown that tree frogs need UVB and could cause problems in those tight quarters. I did a lot of research before getting bulbs and decided to use 6700k 13w CF bulbs in my 12x12x18 gray tree frog Exo Terras.
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The synthesized environment confuddle. From some adjuncts are absolutely necessary all the way out to pure profiteering without scientific studies to prove it is needed at all. I'm no authority on this, and only offer my knowledge as a bio-medical engineer. Very roughly, I'm seeing far more synthetic adjuncts and information for animals than the average bio med office for a hospital can boast.
BioTeach appears to be dead on. If in doubt, supply both a cool and warm light source. But the big rule is common sense. Learn about the animals natural environment. Full optimum exposure to every adjunct rarely happens in the wild. Also, for every supplement you give the animal, you should also give it refuge to escape from these adjuncts. In the case of UV, which makes certain industries great wads of cash, keep in mind two things. UV is normally not detectable in animals until overexposure occurs, and UV is considered a biocide, a poison. Excessive UV drastically alters the environment as well and reduces the population of natural microorganisms that can benefit the animal directly and indirectly. Thus, erring on the side of caution is definitely the way to go.
 

Saark

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So, I've read that they need the UVB and am thinking of going with a regular "Natural light" bulb as well as a UVB/UVA bulb. If necessary, I can put them on separate timers to control the amount of exposure. There will be plenty of places to "hide" from the light in the form of hanging plants. And of course, they have the option of burrowing into the substrate as they are sometimes wont to do. The UVB bulb supposedly has an effective range of 15in and the tank is 18in tall. I'd rather provide them with a little more that they can hide from than a little too little that they can't compensate for. I hope this works out for the best. I gotta say, my tarantulas are much easier to care for! lol

Edit: I think I am going to put the UVB bulb on a timer and run it a few hours a day, say 11 - 3 or 4 in the afternoon. That would kinda mimic the warmer part of the day when the sun is at its strongest. The other bulb is a full spectrum 6700K bulb and that will provide the 12hr day cycle. I did, possibly unfortunately, go with 26w bulbs partly because it seemed stupid to me that the 13w bulbs cost more. We shall see how it goes...

Thanks for the info and suggestions. It is appreciated.
 
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MatthewM1

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The only tree frogs I know of the absolutely need uvb are waxy monkeys. Tree frogs are nocturnal and spend the day hiding from light in the wild and recieve little to no uvb. Most keepers just dust feeders with a calcium w/d3 supplement every 2 or 3 feedings and have no issues with mbd. If you want to use one go with a low strength and it's shouldn't harm them but it's unnecessary, a plain white light for a day/night cycle will be sufficient.

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viper69

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So, I've read that they need the UVB
Would you be able to provide a link where you read this, I'd be interested in reading the specific information you located! Thanks in advance.
 

Saark

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Would you be able to provide a link where you read this, I'd be interested in reading the specific information you located! Thanks in advance.
Well, I've found it mentioned at a few sites but I don't know how valid the info is. I mean, how much can you trust Pet Supplies Plus?
http://www.petsuppliesplus.com/content.jsp?pageName=barking_tree_frog

This care sheet says they don't really need much light at all so, on the issue of full spectrum lighting, opinions run the full spectrum from don't need to must have...

This site says UVB is optional if a dietary supplement is provided
http://www.pollywog.co.uk/component...heets/125-barking-treefrog-hyla-gratiosa.html

This site says that even though they are nocturnal, they should still have some exposure
http://jabberwockreptiles.com/about-the-animals/care-sheets/barking-tree-frog-care

This one says they should get UVA & UVB
http://www.reptilesncritters.com/care-guide-barking-tree-frog.php

Again, I don't know how valid the info is from these sites which is why I wanted to ask people who keep them rather than just relying on people who sell the equipment that we "must" have. :o_O:
 

The Snark

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Typical. I am not criticizing Saark here but looking through those links, I find no citations or data citing legitimate scientific research. Two of those sites actively seek reader contributions for pet care articles. They are not in the business of caring for animals. Their business is selling them. Their offered info may help in keeping an animal healthy, but the bottom line with all those businesses is the faster the animals die, the more money they make selling replacements.
Another thing to keep in mind. Tropical animals receive a fraction of the UV that ones from temperate ones do.
 
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Saark

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True, and actually the full spectrum bulb I got is a 2.0 and provides just a small amount of UVB so maybe that will be fine and I don't need to go with the extra 5.0 bulb. Plus, it will save me a few bucks too. I do love to over think things!
 

viper69

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I find the mentioning of UVA surprising actually. One of the links you mentioned reads UV isn't needed with proper supplementation. I never used UV lights w/my Red Eye or White's Tree Frog, but those are different species. I'd hit a frog forum to find out for sure.
 

Saark

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Ya know, I'm finding almost no info out there on these little guys. Having almost no luck even at frogforum.net. I broke down and registered there so I could ask about them.
 

viper69

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I'd be curious to find out the info. There's also dendroboards too, while it's for Dart Frogs, I'm sure many have other frogs. Those people really know frogs too.
 

RzezniksRunAway

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The vet that I use recommends low level UVB for everything that isn't a ground/burrow dwelling nocturnal creature. Meaning leopard geckos don't need it because they are nocturnal and don't generally bask, they absorb their heat warm burrows in their native habitat. Canopy dwelling tree frogs, while nocturnal, would need a low level of UVB. I have to say his reasoning makes complete sense to me, just because something is nocturnal doesn't mean it isn't absorbing light while sleeping during the day. I have a 2.0 on my female crested geckos, and I've gotten a better feeding response and better eggs from the ones that have it, as opposed to the ones that don't.

A post I found while looking for an article I read a few years back on blood calcium levels of corn snakes with UVB and without, and now I can't find the article.
http://www.reptileforums.co.uk/forums/amphibians/421553-uvb-amphibians-theory-musings.html

Found it.
http://vetmed.illinois.edu/mmitch/pdf/corn snake.pdf


My thought on it is rather than dust insects with a calcium/ vit d powder, allow them to expose themselves to an appropriate level of UVB to produce their own vitamin D. It's my understanding that it's almost impossible to overdose on vitamin d from synthesis, but it's fairly easy to OD from supplements.
 

Saark

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Do you think the 5.0 is unnecessary then? I have the 26w Repti-Glo 2.0 (now called Natural Light) that will be on 12hrs a day. I was going to run the 26w 5.0 Repti-Glo (now called the UVB 100) from 11am to about 1 or 2pm. I guess my thinking there was that it would kinda mimic the increase when the sun is at its strongest during the day. The frogs will be housed in a 12x12x18 tank with lots of hanging plastic plants on the tank walls for cover.
 

RzezniksRunAway

Arachnobaron
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I personally would use the 2.0. I think it would be fine if you used the 5.0 on a timer, but you'd want to watch the heat output at that time. If you're using the exoterra or zoomed 12" fixtures on top it doesn't really leave a lot of room for air flow, so it might get a little warm with both of them going even though they are lower output lights.
 

viper69

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Do you think the 5.0 is unnecessary then? I have the 26w Repti-Glo 2.0 (now called Natural Light) that will be on 12hrs a day. I was going to run the 26w 5.0 Repti-Glo (now called the UVB 100) from 11am to about 1 or 2pm. I guess my thinking there was that it would kinda mimic the increase when the sun is at its strongest during the day. The frogs will be housed in a 12x12x18 tank with lots of hanging plastic plants on the tank walls for cover.
I wouldn't do that. You have to remember it's a light, putting out constant UV, not just at 2pm when the temperature is hottest. If you are going to use a UV bulb, I'd get a 2.0.

---------- Post added 01-10-2014 at 04:04 PM ----------

Found it.
http://vetmed.illinois.edu/mmitch/pdf/corn snake.pdf


My thought on it is rather than dust insects with a calcium/ vit d powder, allow them to expose themselves to an appropriate level of UVB to produce their own vitamin D. It's my understanding that it's almost impossible to overdose on vitamin d from synthesis, but it's fairly easy to OD from supplements.

Thanks a lot of that paper!!! I've heard similar reports as well for animals w/UVB vs those without it.
 

BioTeach

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Running 2 lamps on that tank is quite a bit of light. I run one light each on all 3 of mine that size and they are heavily planted. Running 2 would put out too much heat and light IMO.


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Saark

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Running 2 lamps on that tank is quite a bit of light. I run one light each on all 3 of mine that size and they are heavily planted. Running 2 would put out too much heat and light IMO.


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I have to say, the 5.0 UVB bulb puts out very little light. I put it on top of my 8x8x12 tank just to check it out and I could barely tell there was a light on. Also, keep in mind that this light will only be on for a couple hours. The rest of the time, only the full spectrum bulb will be on. I will have a digital thermometer in the tank to keep an eye on the temps and will take action if it gets too warm. I would think though that in the summer it gets fairly warm in FL where these guys are from. Add that to the fact that in the summer I run central air to keep the house cool, the little boost of heat from the bulbs may be welcome. Also, we only heat to 65 during the day and 58 during the night during the winter months (I'm in Central NY so that's like 5-6 months out of the year) so again, the heat from the bulb will help mitigate the low ambient temps.
 

RzezniksRunAway

Arachnobaron
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Barking Tree frogs are native as far north as Delaware, so I wouldn't be too concerned about lower temps except when it comes to digesting food.

http://www.uvguide.co.uk/phototherapyphosphor-tests.htm

If you want to get a little more obsessive.

There was an article in Reptiles magazine that was about breeding Uroplatus geckos that detailed a way to find out specific temperature fluctuations and UV indexes based on latitude and longitude. Melted my brain, I wish I could find it now.
 
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