How
Would You Know if a Frog or Tadpole Was Sick?
July
8th: Regardless
of any media coverage you have seen recently, if you find a sick or injured
frog, you should still CONTACT US. In
most cases, we are still taking in these frogs ourselves although we need
to raise a lot more money to cover care costs.
Please do NOT phone your local wildlife rescue organisation. These animals
require special handling, isolation, and intensive disinfection procedures
involving very expensive chemicals. Local wildlife carers are not setup
to identify or handle the diseases we're seeing in this region's frogs.
Don't forget to ALWAYS use gloves or a plastic bag over your hands to
pick up frogs.
If
you are outside FNQ and are contacting us to do a long-distance diagnosis,
please scroll down to the bottom of this page.
Here's a list of symptoms
often seen in sick frogs. If the frog has the first symptom in the list
OR at least TWO of the rest of the symptoms in this list, it is mostly
likely suffering from an illness or parasites.
- sitting out in
the open during the daytime (such as in the middle of a lawn or on a
road or driveway)
- very thin
- extremes of colour
such as very pale or very dark or weird shades like red, khaki, etc.
- lumps, abscesses,
lesions or other types of holes or tears
in
the skin
- doesn't hop properly
or is very weak when it tries to move
- red or pink flush
or 'pimples' on the belly (ventral surface)
- freckles, blotches,
pale spots or black patches on the back or legs (other than those which
might naturally occur on the species)
- is producing a
very slimy coating on the body without trying to rub the coating forward
with its arms or legs
- doesn't right itself
when placed on its back
- eyes are cloudy
or there is a retractable see-through membrane that is completely or
partially covering the eye
- body is swollen
up with either air or fluid
- underside of the
body is red, pink or orange, esp. towards the back end of the body
- rear legs seem
to be crippled and lack proper coordination and jumping force
- front half of the
body looks normal and back half looks stunted
- has any deformities
such as wrong number of toes, misshapened eye or missing eye, bent bones
in the legs, etc.
Some illnesses being
researched (such as ranaviruses and chytrid fungus) have dramatic impacts
on tadpoles and large numbers of dying metamorphs can be an indication
of either of these serious amphibian diseases. Always try to find someone
who can receive tadpoles or do testing on them because monitoring the
spread and incidence of these diseases is so important. If you can't find
anyone quickly, at least store the dead tadpoles in the freezer with a
label on the container (or inside a double bag) so that they can be sent
to a researcher later. Depending on where you are, we might know of someone
in your area to help.
If you are in North
Queensland and find a frog with two or more of the above symptoms, we
ask you to turn it in to the Cairns Frog Hospital for treatment and so
that records can be kept of where diseases are active. We have a chance
of making the frog well if you get it to us quickly but, if the frog should
die before transporting it, drop it in to us anyway so that we can get
the pathology done and find out what illness it had. To do this:
- Always, ALWAYS,
ALWAYS
wear disposable gloves or a plastic bag over your hand to handle the
frog/toad
- put the frog into
a plastic container with a secure lid with air holes in it
- add just a tiny
bit of clean water and put a couple leaves into the container if it
is a see-through one
- secure the lid
- call the Cairns
Frog Hospital afternoons and evenings on (07) 4045-0373
- label the container
with your contact details, the exact location the frog was found (exact
street address or name of a property and coordinates) and any observations
about its behavior and the symptoms it had
With frogs that are
already dead when you find them, they can be frozen instead.
During the winter
months, chytrid fungus can be a major problem and the symptoms for this
disease are not listed on this page so that they can't be confused with
the symptoms for other diseases. You can find out about how to recognise
chytrid in our Chytrid recognition page.
Tadpoles?
With tadpoles, it
is not always so obvious. If there is a mass die-off of a batch of tadpoles,
the problem might be the water quality, chemicals (such as a neighbour's
herbicide or pesticide spraying) or illness within the tadpoles. It is
hard to determine which of these might be the cause unless you can get
the dead tadpoles tested by an appropriate lab. If you believe there might
be a problem with the pond or aquarium, have a look at our Raising
Tadpoles page to see if your setup is consistent with the best setup
for tadpoles. The survival problem might be easily corrected through a
change of submerged plants, a pump left on longer for more oxygen, a flyscreen
over the top to keep out birds and native rats, change of source for your
water supply, or some other simple change. If you've set up everything
correctly and tadpoles are still dying in large numbers, there might be
a problem within the tadpoles.
If any of the tadpoles
in a clutch/tank/pond have any of these symptoms below, please contact
us quickly:
- bloating in the
abdomen
- air bubbles in
the body

- continued weight
loss until the tadpole looks like a head and skinny tail with no body
in between
- a large number
simply aren't getting any bigger
- difficulty swimming
or swimming in circles or on its side
- strange growths
on the body such as lumps or pale pathes that look like snowflakes stuck
to the skin
- tadpoles metamorph
but all die within a few days or weeks
- tadpoles are very
washed out in colour or some go extremely dark in colour
- any have bends
in their tails (see photo at right) or their tails are only half as
long as they should be
- multiple arms or
legs or missing arms and legs
- tree frog tadpoles
which can't climb out of the container when they try to metamorph and
are found drowned in the container (this symptom does not apply to ground
dwelling frogs who are normally unable to climb walls))
If you believe there
might be something wrong with your tadpoles, please save what's left and
contact us. We will set them up here and see if the problem continues
- if it is not corrected by the husbandy change and if there is evidence
of a disease, we can send specimens away for testing and/or advise you
about your setup.
If you are outside
this region, please try to find a vet or a local university with a zoology
or environmental science program. Very few groups take in frogs but you
might be lucky where you are located!
Long-distance
diagnosis:
Because of our lengthy
experience with established but especially newer problems that have arisen
in frog populations in recent years, we are often able to diagnose these
problems even though the frog is not on the table in front of us. Not
all problems can be identified this way (such as respiratory issues) but
many commonly occuring conditions can.
To do this however,
we will need to ask you for a very detailed background on the ill frog
and all the other frogs you have. We will also need to receive a series
of photographs via email (or live webcam transmission) which are well
lit and very clear. Use the higher resolution (pixel) settings on your
camera so that the photos can be blown up and still be clear. A "mug
shot" type series should be taken of all six sides of the frog (view
from top, view from left with frog sitting on a flat surface - not your
hand, view from back, view from underneath (through glass), view from
front, view from right). Once we have your email, we will reply via email
if the problem is very simple to fix. If a detailed explanation is needed
or we have more questions, we will need to speak to you by phone.
We can provide our
expertise and our time for free but we can't afford to be making 15 to
20 hour-long phone calls per month to all parts of the globe. If we need
to discuss your case over the phone, we will tell you when the best time
is to ring and we ask that you please ring us at those times. There is
only one person here who can do long distance diagnosis and that person
is grossly overwhelmed with work.
Almost all the problems
that we are contacted about will require drugs from a veterinarian or
sometimes very specific anti-fungal chemicals which might need to be sourced
from somebody half way across town or the state. If you are serious about
getting help for your frog, please be prepared to obtain the recommended
treatments. There's nothing more frustrating for us than spending several
hours helping someone who then doesn't do anything that has been recommended
and still emails us to say, "well, thanks, but my frog died"
!
Photos can be emailed
to: curator [at] fdrproject [dot] org [dot] au and we can be phoned on
(07) 4045-0373 after 12:30p Qld time (although after 5:00pm is better).
last updated: Nov. 10th, 2008

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