LakesideBoas
Herpaholic
Harald's post #295 links to post #186 which gives a timeline of sorts.
Ed's email said:X___, hello. how are the frogs doing that I sold to the zoo. ornates,pyxies and australian whites tree frogs?
The zoo's vets did alot of testing on them before they entered your collection, was there anything unusual found in the tests?
Ed,
the Zoo's response said:All the frogs are doing well. I have a few of the Whites and one pyxie on exhibit right now. The other frogs are part of the education collection that are used for animal talks and the like.
X____ X X____
Assistant Curator of Reptiles and Amphibians
X_____ Zoo
X____________
xxx-xxx-xxxx
hhmoore said:OK, boys and girls, here is one of the moments you have been waiting for.
Ed contacted me, asking if I would confirm the statement about the wellbeing of the frogs he sent to the zoo. I agreed, stipulating that the emails be forwarded to me with intact headers.
The only editing I have done is to remove the Zoo person's info, and to eliminate some extra line spaces.
Both emails were dated Sept 4 (today)
Posted by the Zoo's response
All the frogs are doing well. I have a few of the Whites and one pyxie on exhibit right now. The other frogs are part of the education collection that are used for animal talks and the like.
X____ X X____
Assistant Curator of Reptiles and Amphibians
X_____ Zoo
X____________
xxx-xxx-xxxx
Ed Clark said:I offered her a free red morph baby and told her I would pay the shipping.
She said she did not want anything from me.
She also posted that the female I sent her laid a set of healthy fertile eggs.![]()
Hepatitis isn't something that kills frogs in one day either. You also (unless you are Superman) can not diagnose this disease with the naked eye. Try again.DaveyFig said:AFTER a frog dies, how fast does it get hepatitis? It has already been shown that it had hepatitis, and I may be way off here, but I don't think that hepatitis is something that just pops up when a dead frog is left on wet paper towels.
DaveyFig said:I have read this thread and I only have one question! YAY!!
I am about to leave for school, so don't have time to research it myself, but will when I get home tonight if nobody posts here while I am gone. Some say that until the CF test comes back then this should be dropped. Others(and some of the same) talk about how fast bacteria can grow in a short period of time in a humid environment. So, my one questions is...
AFTER a frog dies, how fast does it get hepatitis? It has already been shown that it had hepatitis, and I may be way off here, but I don't think that hepatitis is something that just pops up when a dead frog is left on wet paper towels.
LakesideBoas said:Do we have to get into a pissing contest in every thread here now?
I also have a "sheepskin" hanging on my brag-wall that states I completed my requirments to be a licensed veterinary technician. I'm not walking around beating people about the head with it.K412 said:I have stated my level of education in the field of veterinary medicine.
K412 said:I did not stress the frog, I was aware that they stress easily.
You state that you found your frog deceased within 45 minutes of it's demise, although you had it for 24 hours according to your first post, yet you also state you were aware they stress easy and you "left it alone". A whole 45 minutes...K412 said:I picked up the bowl to put the frog up higher under the light where it was warm and then left it alone.
Autoclave; an apparatus in which steam under pressure effects sterilization. Wet, Heat, Humidity, no bacteria!LakesideBoas said:I was stating a point of fact: wet plus heat and humidity plus dead thing equals cool place for bacteria to thrive. Care to prove me wrong?
LakesideBoas said:Cool.![]()