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Killer frogs in garden ponds
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Sue Lambrini Smith | Report | 20 Feb 2005 00:18 |
maggy- could it have been an heron ? sue [ who has 2 ponds and lots of randy frogs ! lol] |
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MaggyfromWestYorkshire | Report | 20 Feb 2005 00:13 |
So where did my fish go then??!! Honestly they disappeared without a trace? Oh well, one of lifes little mysteries......... Maggy |
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Joan | Report | 19 Feb 2005 18:42 |
'The Great Love In' was in Belfast, here yesterday. In my Mums pond. It was eaxactly a year and a day since last years love in! Accurate little things arent they? Joan. |
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ChrisofWessex | Report | 19 Feb 2005 18:32 |
Joan is right - Maggy is wrong - the frogs will latch on to anything during mating season! These (in our pond) latched on to the head of fish - fish could not breathe - and so died. The last one we found with the frog still attached had one of its gills pushed right in. Just thought it might solve mystery of unexplained deaths - we have lost 3 this year and each year we lose one or two at this time of year. Funnily enough we have no frog spawn yet - although we usually find it from late January. Ann |
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Unknown | Report | 19 Feb 2005 18:10 |
A couple of years back my boys and I went down to the local river and I saw what I thought were some stones at the bottom of the river that appeared to be moving. It was in fact a female frog covered in about 5 males all grabbing on! Nature is quite blatant at times - I remember also a drake trying to have his way with a duck and chasing her through the market place. My son, 5, said 'Mummy I don't think she wants him to do that to her!' nell |
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Joan | Report | 19 Feb 2005 18:06 |
LOL Maggy! I think what was meant is that at this time of year, frog mating season, desperate frogs will grab anything and try it on! A bit like many men really! The frogs must be wearing those beer goggles! Any way the fish dies'cause it cant breathe. They dont get eaten by the frogs. Have I got that right? Joan. |
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Lisa | Report | 19 Feb 2005 18:00 |
We had an orfe that decided to leap out - our cat seized the opportunity and ate it! Lisa |
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MaggyfromWestYorkshire | Report | 19 Feb 2005 17:58 |
Didn't realise that frogs would eat fish Ann. That must explain what happened to mine. We had a full pond once but they all dwindled without a trace. Now we just have a garden full of frogs! Maggy |
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ChrisofWessex | Report | 19 Feb 2005 10:55 |
Am nudging this up (one time only) in order that it might solve unexplained deaths of fish in garden ponds to those who may not have seen it. Ann |
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ChrisofWessex | Report | 7 Feb 2005 13:35 |
It is covered with netting at the moment as it has been for some months as we are surrounded by oak trees and have a wood at the end of our garden - but frogs are like mice apparently - can squeeze through small gaps. Netting goes on about Oct/Nov and comes off about end of April when the danger of the heron fishing has gone! Yes we also have a plastic heron beside pond as well now since we lost large koi and orfe to the rotten devil. Ann |
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badger | Report | 7 Feb 2005 13:28 |
Is your pond small enough to cover with netting Ann?,if it is you could remove the frogs and then cover it over to prevent it happening againFred.ptfg.&a&g&s. |
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Researching: |
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ChrisofWessex | Report | 7 Feb 2005 13:22 |
Nearly every year at this time we appear to lose at least one fish usually two. No signs of infection - pond water tested and found to be OK. Last week on successive days we lost three - all orfe about 8-9" long, 2 golden and 1 blue. Yet again water OK and no signs of infection. However the last one could see it on bottom of pond and could not lift it after three attempts - husband tried and after a couple of tries got it up - we now know why - it had drowned - firmly clamped around its head was a frog. This is the mating season for frogs and we do know that apparently they will clamp on to anything which moves. We have, in the past, found a dead frog with another clamped firmly on and again some years ago a fish with a frog clamped on - but we had forgotten. It might solve the mystery for other owners who find unexplained deaths in their garden pond. Unfortunately the 'killer' escaped - back into the pond - before he could be captured and transferred to the village pond. The other fish in our pond are either too big - 14" plus or too small - 4-5" so hopefully that is it for this year but so annoying. |