You should feed a Pac Man Frog about 5 crickets if it is less than a year old it should be fed about every other day and if younger than 6 months it should be fed 5 crickets every day. Lastly, adults should be fed 5 crickets every 5-6 days. It can also be fed, fish, waxworms, and many other treats.
depends on what they eat
three wombats and 47 pents of a door
Depends on what they eat
Albino pacman frogs require more care then a regular pacman, albino's require certain lighting that wouldent normally be a problem for other pacman frogs.
yes
£5
noNo they're not poisonous
Never house a pacman frog with any other animal. Pacman frogs will not hesitate to eat anything smaller than them.
no they dont like being held it causes stress to the pacman frog no handling the beter for him
LOL they dont live anywhere albino pacman frogs are captive bred meaining that they only exist in captivity because humans breed them to get that color they dont exist in the wild they would die. (:
NO! Pacman frogs will eat just about anything... This could be fatal to both animals.
South America: They are also known as the South American Horned Frog.
I'm pretty sure that all tree frogs remain small - I have Pacific Tree Frogs. The species you want to avoid are Pacman frogs, Pixie Frogs, African Clawed Frogs, and of course Bullfrogs.
You shouldn't these animal is cannibalistic. Go to frogforum.net and awnser all your questions
If you are a beginner frog keeper, you need a friendly, easy-to-take-care-of frog. Green tree frogs, White's tree frogs, and African Dwarf frogs are some that are good starter frogs. Beginners should NEVER get Pacman frogs, bullfrogs, Pixie frogs, or Red-eyed tree frogs. You should only get these frogs if you are an experienced frog keeper. Pacman frogs bite and snap and growl, bullfrogs are huge and vicious, and can give you a nasty bite (so can Pacman frogs!), Pixie frogs are big and also vicious, and Red-eyed tree frogs are VERY VERY VERY fragile and break joints easily. So again, Green tree frogs, White's tree frogs, and African Dwarf frogs are the way to go!