If you mean a wild frog that will stay living outside, then don't feed it, it will find food itself. (though i guess you could try to feed it if you want). If you mean bring it inside as a pet, this will be stressful and probably kill it unless you bring it in when it is young. You can buy crickets and mealworms at many pet stores. Or you can look under rocks and things for worms, pill bugs, and small beetles. amphibians caught in the wild where there is a winter season must get a hibernation period in or it wont survive and will go crazy
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! =)
Frogs will only eat live food, it must be moving before they see it as food. Small ants or fruit flies are good for tiny frogs, when they are slightly bigger they can be feed meal worms purchased from a local pet store. If you have a big frog, then feed it superworms, mealworms, large crickets, and waxworms from a pet store, because those are pretty big. Medium sized frogs should have medium sized crickets and mealworms. Tiny frogs can have fruit flies and small ants. ALWAYS get your frog's food from a pet store, even if you have a wild one, because wild bugs could have diseases, and kill your frog.
Wild baby rabbits can eat rabbit pellets, hay and carrots when they are two weeks old. Before that you should hand feed them.
food
you feed it one pinkie everyday so seven pinkie's.
flies
u should feed the wild cats carrots and lettuce
I captivity you can feed them flightless fruit flies. In the wild they eat fire ants.
You should NOT feed wild animals.
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! =)
bird feed
You should not feed any wild animal. They are capable of taking care of themselves and should never become habituated to taking food from humans.
wild
Frogs will only eat live food, it must be moving before they see it as food. Small ants or fruit flies are good for tiny frogs, when they are slightly bigger they can be feed meal worms purchased from a local pet store. If you have a big frog, then feed it superworms, mealworms, large crickets, and waxworms from a pet store, because those are pretty big. Medium sized frogs should have medium sized crickets and mealworms. Tiny frogs can have fruit flies and small ants. ALWAYS get your frog's food from a pet store, even if you have a wild one, because wild bugs could have diseases, and kill your frog.
I feed my frog at night because my hide all day but sometimes in morning I does not matter
depends on what kind of frog.
no