if you feed it and give it what it needs it probally wont die
A Green Tree Frog
No. Pet frogs have been illegal in Canada since 1976, when a newly elected Prime Minister contracted a deadly virus through the skin secretions of the pet frog of the daughter of the Mayor of Toronto.
In a terrarium. It's like an aquarium only with dirt and leaves and stuff.
I'm not sure but you should probably check with your pet store or your council.
That depends on what type of frog you have purchased. They all have different needs, so you should contact the store to see what requirements you particular frog has.
The Spotted Frog will be pet of the month July of 2009.
If your frog is wild-caught or lives in your pond, then yes. However, if you bought your frog from a pet shop it is likely that he/she was bred in captivity and you shouldn't feed him/her wild insects. There are several reasons for this, but the main one is that in the wild, frogs are immune to some diseases that insects carry, whereas a captive-bred frog will have eaten only healthy insects from the pet shop, as have its parents and sometimes even its grandparents. This is why you must first check before feeding your pet frog food from your garden. If you did find or buy a wild frog, then you could catch ants, fruitflies, houseflies, etc for him/her! =)
In the wild... wild animals should never be taken as pets. Go buy frogs from a pet store.
well u buy frog from pet shops but u could alway find a pond and catch one in there with a net try that or go to petco ,petsmart or even reptiel zoo
Yes you can, you will need to find a source of flies for the toad/frog (in your case a bull frog) to supply food for the frog. also the water it lives in must be from where you found it or any other nearby waterlife pond. The frogs prefer to eat flies alive but they will eat them dead. it is harder to find alive flies unless you have a bunch flying around your house like i do. - good luck ribbet ribbet amphibians from the norther hemisphere need a hibernation time every year
Take it to a Taxidermist...
A pet frog