Quote Originally Posted by wilomn View Post
So now there are no frogs in Asia?

My goodness, I am truly surprised. Everything I've ever read or seen stated that there were certainly frogs there. I even know people personally who have said that they themselves had seen frogs in Asia.

I guess you just can't trust anyone.

OP, your frogs may or may not survive. The snake may or may not eat them. Frogs aren't the best diet for burms and there is a chance of some transfer of organisms that would negatively affect your snake.

Plus, a lot of treefrogs are nocturnal. You'll never see them. It sounds really easy, and it is, but the effect you're looking for may be missing.

If it's activity you want in there, fill it with frogs and geckos.
Thank you for your well informed and understanding post. That's the kind of response I was looking for. Although it doesn't answer my question completely, it does reinforce my thought that snakes encounter non-prey items in the wild.

What I'm looking for in my enclosure is an interesting collaboration of plants and animals like a vivarium. If some are nocturnal and others are diurnal then so be it. It will make the enclosure that much better in my opinion. I would just like to know that if the snake chose to turn on it's "cage-mates", would it hurt the snake? I'm not planning on getting poison dart frogs or anything, just some brightly colored tree frogs that could hold their own.