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"Kay" wrote I'm not sure the newts are good news for frogs. Newts feed on tadpoles. -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" It all balances out. We have many newts and many frogs. We also get regular visits from the Heron. The least agile goldfish long since got swallowed but the few that remain continue to evade being eaten. (A liberal supply of rocks and old clay tubes on the bottom of the ponds provide air-raid shelter!) The frogs have already met and deposited copious amounts of healthy spawn. Some of the tadpoles will help our newts to thrive, some will fatten the dragonfly nymphs. And a few will leave the pond, evade the blades of the lawnmower and return as adults. |
#2
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In article , Tumbleweed
writes "Kay" wrote I'm not sure the newts are good news for frogs. Newts feed on tadpoles. It all balances out. Depends on other things, though, doesn't it? Fortunately, the weedy ponds favoured by newts for breeding also have lots of cover for the frog tadpoles. But if a couple of newts took up residence in a sparsely weeded pond, the could wreak havoc among the tadpoles. But then that's why frogs breed as they do - lots of spares. We have many newts and many frogs. We also get regular visits from the Heron. Likewise. But now the newt population is topping 50, I think we are beginning to see the effect on the number of young frogs that we get. Certainly the front pond, with only one newt, had a lot more frog tadpoles later in the season than did the back pond which is the one the newts favour. -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
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