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Animal picture of the day: baby blue frog

Baby blue frog
Baby blue poison dart frog. Photo by Rhett A Butler

The blue color form of the green-and-black poison dart frog (Dendrobates auratus) is occurs on the Pacific side of parts of Panama. This individual is a juvenile.



Dendrobates auratus is generally green and black but exhibits a variety of color forms across its range from south Nicaragua to northwestern Colombia (it does not occur in the Amazon rainforest).



Dendrobates auratus is common in the pet trade, where it is often bred in captivity.



Like other poison dart frogs, Dendrobates auratus derives its toxicity from the arthropods it eats — typically ants and mites. Individuals raised in captivity are not toxic.



Baby blue auratus
Baby blue auratus frog. Photo by Rhett A Butler





Here are a few green-and-black variations of Dendrobates auratus.




Near Capurgana in Colombia’s Darien region




Hacienda Baru, Pacific slope of Costa Rica




Aernal, Costa Rica




Barro Colorado Island in Panama




Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica




Colombia’s Choco




In captivity, origin unknown




More unusually blue animals.







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