Things You'll Need
- Small mesh net
- Plastic aquarium
- Non-chlorinated water
- 4-inch-high plastic container
- Spinach
- Rabbit food pellets
- Hard-boiled egg
- Fork
Instructions
Go to your local fresh water pond, lake or creek in July to find bullfrog tadpoles. Aquarium centers may also sell bullfrog tadpoles. In clear water the tadpoles should be visible from the surface. Pour some water from the body of water into a temporary plastic aquarium. Once the aquarium is prepared, gently scoop up the tadpoles with a small mesh net and place them in the temporary plastic aquarium. Only collect as many tadpoles as the permanent bullfrog tadpoles' habitat can hold, that is, no more than two bullfrog tadpoles for every gallon of water. Do not collect tadpoles from conservation areas.
Pour 2 to 3 inches of non-chlorinated water into the plastic container. You can decorate your tadpole habitat as desired with sticks, plants and rocks. Gently transfer tadpoles into the plastic container by using the small mesh net to scoop them out of the temporary plastic aquarium and into their new habitat.
Feed bullfrog tadpoles twice a day every day with 2 tbsp. of fresh-boiled spinach. As an added diet supplement, two dried rabbit food pellets well-crushed by hand can also be fed to the tadpoles. For additional protein, hard-boiled egg yolks, flaked with a fork can be given to the tadpoles twice a week. Give the bullfrog tadpoles an hour to eat, then clean out food leftovers from the habitat and refill non-chlorinated water if needed.
Watch your bullfrog tadpoles' transformation for the next two years. Once they have grown into frogs, release them back into the wild in the same location that you originally collected them. Bullfrogs can grow up to 8 inches in length, weigh up to 1.5 lbs. and require a carnivorous diet; as a result they are difficult to keep in captivity.