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BenignVanilla
July 14th 03, 04:19 PM
We found a dead frog in the VF yesterday. He has a small lesion/tumor on the
side of his belly. No fish as shown any problems, and all other frogs are
happily sucking down flies.

Do you think this is an anomaly or something to be concerned about?

--
BenignVanilla
Pond Site: www.darofamily.com/jeff/links/mypond

BenignVanilla
July 14th 03, 08:40 PM
"K30a" > wrote in message
...
> BV wrote >>We found a dead frog in the VF yesterday. He has a small
> lesion/tumor on the
> side of his belly. Do you think this is an anomaly or something to be
concerned
> about?>>
>
> Could by 'normal' but....
> Toss the body into a plastic bag and into the freezer.
> If any more frogs show up dead with the same problem freeze them and call
your
> county extension agent.
> They can look into it or contact the nearst university that has an
interest.
> Most states are keeping an eye on amphibian deformities.
> One thing to be aware of is any herbicides or pesticides being sprayed by
> neighbors or in your area.
>
> P.S. You might want to label the freezer frog against future freezer
cleaning
> sessions - can be a bit of surprise! (Been there, done that.)

Uh...er...he has already been...uh...disposed of.

BV.

K30a
July 14th 03, 09:02 PM
BV wrote >>Uh...er...he has already been...uh...disposed of.<<

Okay.
There's always a first time ;-)
But from now on always freeze your dead frogs.
(Bet you never imagined anyone would ever say that to you when you decided to
build a pond...)

Go here:
http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/narcam/reports/reports.htm
You can look up Maryland and the counties involved.


k30a

BenignVanilla
July 14th 03, 09:09 PM
"K30a" > wrote in message
...
> BV wrote >>Uh...er...he has already been...uh...disposed of.<<
>
> Okay.
> There's always a first time ;-)
> But from now on always freeze your dead frogs.
> (Bet you never imagined anyone would ever say that to you when you decided
to
> build a pond...)
>
> Go here:
> http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/narcam/reports/reports.htm
> You can look up Maryland and the counties involved.

Well I am trying to snack on more protein rich foods.

BV.

K30a
July 14th 03, 09:16 PM
Make that malformed frogs, frogs with strange growths. Includes tadpoles.
Freeze and report them.
Most frogs die as a result of being a meal and a few of old age ;-)





k30a

jammer
July 14th 03, 09:57 PM
On 14 Jul 2003 19:14:41 GMT, (K30a) wrote:

>P.S. You might want to label the freezer frog against future freezer cleaning
>sessions - can be a bit of surprise! (Been there, done that.)

I was cleaning out an empty abandoned house. I opened a door in the
house that had an ajoining garage. There staring at me 5 inches from
the door (done on purpose, i think) was a full sized stuffed fierce
looking wolf. After i calmed down and changed about 1/2 of my clothes,
i drug it out to the curb with a sign: Best offer, inquire within. A
guy from a Dallas museum came and offered me $50 for it. Sold.

July 15th 03, 06:00 PM
a few years ago there was a lot of deformed frogs and pesticides, etc were blamed,
then some scientist isolated a disease agent (virus?) that infected the eggs and
caused all kinds of deformities. Ingrid

"BenignVanilla" > wrote:

>We found a dead frog in the VF yesterday. He has a small lesion/tumor on the
>side of his belly. No fish as shown any problems, and all other frogs are
>happily sucking down flies.
>
>Do you think this is an anomaly or something to be concerned about?



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.

K30a
July 15th 03, 06:16 PM
Here is one report, I remember this now.
>>Study concludes parasitic worms cause frog deformitiesTuesday, May 07, 2002By
Jeff Barnard, Associated PressGRANTS PASS, Ore. — After slogging through 101
ponds and wetlands in five western states, scientists on the trail of a
mysterious outbreak of deformities in frogs have settled on a microscopic
parasitic flatworm as the prime suspect.
Linked with existing laboratory studies showing that the trematode known as
Ribeiroia ondatrae can cause the frogs to sprout extra legs, the new field work
closes the loop by showing a direct correlation between the prevalence of the
parasite and the number of deformed frogs, scientists said. <<

The rest of the article can be found here
http://www.enn.com/news/wire-stories/2002/05/05072002/ap_47144.asp

k30a

July 17th 03, 02:37 AM
yep. thats it. Ingrid

(K30a) wrote:

>Here is one report, I remember this now.
>>>Study concludes parasitic worms cause frog deformitiesTuesday, May 07, 2002By
>Jeff Barnard, Associated PressGRANTS PASS, Ore. — After slogging through 101
>ponds and wetlands in five western states, scientists on the trail of a
>mysterious outbreak of deformities in frogs have settled on a microscopic
>parasitic flatworm as the prime suspect.
>Linked with existing laboratory studies showing that the trematode known as
>Ribeiroia ondatrae can cause the frogs to sprout extra legs, the new field work
>closes the loop by showing a direct correlation between the prevalence of the
>parasite and the number of deformed frogs, scientists said. <<
>
>The rest of the article can be found here
>http://www.enn.com/news/wire-stories/2002/05/05072002/ap_47144.asp
>
>k30a



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.