-
Premontane forests and
rocky areas have also been
known to hold frogs.
Dendrobatids tend to live on or
close to the ground, but also in
trees as much as...
- 3 Out of the Blue: Rare Frog bred in
Britain https://web.archive.org/web/20160303212303/http://
dendrobatids.com/
dendrobatids/feeding%26care.htm v t e...
- 30 x 30 cm terrariums; the
highly active dendrobatids are an
exception as they like to climb;
dendrobatids generally need a
terrarium of
about 1 m x...
-
fairly weak toxins,
compared to
those of
other dendrobatids. It may be one of the most
primitive of
dendrobatids, as it has only
begun to
develop skin alkaloids...
- Yotsuyama****a, M. & Yasumoto, T. (1994). "1st
Occurrence of
Tetrodotoxin in a
Dendrobatid Frog (Colostethus inguinalis), with
Further Reports for the
Bufonid Genus...
- to be true-breeding. O. pumilio,
while not the most
poisonous of the
dendrobatids, is the most
toxic member of its genus. The diet of O.
pumilio causes...
- the Dendrobatidae, the
poison dart frogs, but are not as
toxic as most
dendrobatids are. The
Aromobatidae were
separated from the
Dendrobatidae only in 2006...
- "Formicine ants: an
arthropod source for the
pumiliotoxin alkaloids of
dendrobatid poison frogs".
Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. 101 (21):...
- can eat food
items much
larger in
relation to its size than most
other dendrobatids. The main
natural sources of food of P.
terribilis are the ants in the...
- colors,
especially its red-orange back, for
which it is named. Like all
dendrobatids, it does not
manufacture its
poison itself, but
rather is
theorized to...