






🐸 Keep your terrarium thriving with nature’s tiniest live food powerhouses!
Josh's Frogs Temperate Springtail Culture (32 oz) is a premium live food source designed for dart frogs and other small insectivores. Housed in a charcoal-based substrate, this culture can sustain itself for months with rapid reproduction, providing a continuous supply of springtails. The product is optimized for shipping via USPS, UPS, or FedEx to ensure maximum survival rates, making it an essential, low-maintenance addition for terrarium enthusiasts seeking a natural, eco-friendly feeding solution.









| ASIN | B00JJWGF04 |
| Age Range (Description) | Adult |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Animal Food Diet Type | Raw |
| Best Sellers Rank | #76,096 in Pet Supplies ( See Top 100 in Pet Supplies ) #519 in Reptile & Amphibian Food |
| Brand | Josh's Frogs |
| Brand Name | Josh's Frogs |
| Breed Recommendation | All Breed Sizes |
| Container Type | Bag |
| Customer Reviews | 3.6 out of 5 stars 934 Reviews |
| Flavor | Unflavored |
| Item Form | Seeds |
| Item Weight | 1.4 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Josh's Frogs |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Occasion | Birthday |
| Special Ingredients | Charcoal |
| Specific Uses For Product | Terrarium maintenance, feeding insects |
| UPC | 856106005285 |
| Unit Count | 32 Ounce |
P**A
Wasn't sure if I had a dead colony so I waited...
This arrived to me during the cold of January. We had a random 40-50 degree week so I ordered. It arrived and ended up sitting on the porch much of the day since we never saw or heard the delivery driver. I brought it in and opened the top and saw nothing. I put the top back on very loosely and waited some more. After several days I saw one or two springtails but that was it. I ordered the springtail food from the same brand and spritzed the charcoal with some unchlorinated water. When I finally received the food, I had had the colony for going on two weeks. It looked absolutely dead. I added the food and waited a few days. When I opened it back up I had springtails. I have repeated the feeding and watering and about 3 weeks on, it is thriving. If you receive this and it looks dead, be patient...and add some type of food. Don't overdo the food, just the tiniest bit works. Keep the environment moist, but don't drown them. Wait and you will see your colony begin to grow. Glad that I puchased this because the Petco/PetSmart prices are ridiculous. Now I have an endless supply, instead of paying $10 for a few at a time.
T**.
Culture has produced only one single springtail. It's a FAIL.
I really wanted this culture to knock my socks off. Not a single springtail in the culture. I've scrutinized the container under magnification for any sign of springtails. No live ones, no dead ones. I'll update in a few days when there should be at the least some eggs hatching out. Nice container with nice label and nice charcoal. However, that isn't what I paid $25 for. Stay tuned for my update to see what happens with this 32 ounce springtail culture. If it doesn't produce springtails in that time I'll opt for a full refund. Even though it's not returnable, you can still get a refund from Amazon. Update 10/10: Only one springtail so far. Not enough to feed my nepenthes seedlings or my Betta fish. Amazon gave me a full refund.
R**A
Feed and wait! Follow directions and it will be FULL of live spring tails!
I'm really glad I read the reviews and description/instructions from seller!! When mine arrived I thought maybe it WAS all dead like so many low star reviews, but if you read the directions you'll know that it's actually full of EGGS that hatch quickly. I saw no movement AT ALL and my package was very cold from shipping. I left it alone for a few hours and MAYBE saw 3 or 4 individuals crawling around. So, like they say to do, I fed the culture, LOOSELY ATTACHED THE LID SO THERE IS AIR EXCHANGE, and set it aside for 2 days... SO MANY SPRING TAILS!!! NOW If I pour out 1 or two ounces a PILE of 100+ active adults come pouring out! It's been a few weeks now and the culture is HUUUGE! Thing is, Shipping is hard on these little ones, the adults will die, but the eggs laid in it and the very next generation is what you're really buying. So make sure you purchase them WITH feed and WITH TIME to let them breed up for a few days before you have to use them (if you want to keep a constant culture going). And they MUST be kept with the lid not fully tightened so there is air exchange, without which you could kill the culture on your own. I got them for constructing vivariums and terrariums. I'm NEVER going to have to buy a new culture. I'm saddened that so many people likely suffocated or threw out a perfectly good culture assuming it was dead when they really just needed to feed, check the water, and wait a few days... week max if it froze or boiled hard in transit. That said, I'm sure some people did do this and didn't get the same results. So they may have a good warning on being considerate of how long and at what temperatures the package may be exposed to before it gets to you. If you can control for any of those factors it may help prevent total catastrophic failure of the culture. As to how well they work for plant care? (If you need to feed animals, I don't use them for that) I wish I took pics. NIGHT AND DAY! I have enclosed Tupperware for moss and succulent propagation and the succulents particularly were molding. When my culture arrived I took ONE PIECE of carbon out and put it in the box since I didn't want to let them rot while waiting for the springtails to breed. Well, there must have been enough eggs! I saw adults in the bin within 24 hrs and after 3 days the plants were 100% clear of rot and growing green and healthy!!! They really really clean up! After a week I was able to pour a pile of new springtails in to make sure the bin is thoroughly inoculated. I will buy from Josh's frogs again. MARVELOUS!
E**L
Full of life!
Don't listen to the negative reviews! You need to understand that you're probably not going to get live springtails if there's extreme weather, but you are going to receive a bunch of eggs. I received my culture with one half dead springtail, I listened to the instructions and opened up the container to release the gas build up. I also added some more water (just an inch high) and a few rice grains at the top for food. I opened the container everyday in the morning and in under a month the culture is booming with life. I'm very pleased, thank you! Just remember the springtails eat the mold that grows on the food, so you just need two or three rice grains at first, but when you have a large colony you can add a little more after they finish up their food. I add more food every two weeks.
A**R
If I could rate this zero stars I would
I am a longtime - and serious - reptile and isopod aficionado. I take my bioactive setups VERY seriously. I had read mixed reviews on these springtails, but I always take reviews with a grain of salt. I decided to order this culture because I was in desperate need of 32 oz+ of springtails. The weather was great when they arrived, and it wasn’t bad when they were in transit. Since I am fairly-recently disabled they were brought indoors immediately. I de-gassed them right away, but I was disappointed to see absolutely no signs of life. (I have 20/15 vision, thanks to LASIK, and I have eyes trained to detect the smallest life forms.) I have purchased springtail cultures that [initially] appeared to be subpar, so I gave this culture the benefit of the doubt. We came upon 24, 48, 72 hours and beyond...nothing. I waited 1, 2, 3+ weeks…nothing. No signs of life. It has now been >2 months since I received my order. This culture has been kept under perfect conditions, and yet it had failed to produce a single living springtail! (If anyone wants to question me - yes, I waited instead of asking for a refund immediately. Springtails often pop up out of nowhere, and a few days is not enough time. To know whether a culture will succeed or fail. If I had made a premature judgment it would have been irrelevant.) I can recommend a few Amazon sellers if you are looking for springtails, but I will never recommend these. I have a solid reputation in the reptile community, and I always seek to lift others up, but I will always call out bad sources when I encounter them. Do your research. Please go bioactive - but make the best choices when it comes to your scaly companions!! I am happy to provide resources to whoever needs them.
J**G
2 months to hatch, NOT LUMP WOOD CHARCOAL, TOO FULL!
Arrived completely "dead" as expected, so I put in two grains of raw rice and poured in a bit of water and let it sit. After a month of regular checks, it still had absolutely nothing. Almost 2 months later, it finally produced some springtails. Not sure why it took so long to hatch, but I'll take it. Big downside is it comes WAY too full of charcoal and the charcoal is TOO SMALL! You're supposed to use lump wood charcoal so it's easier to transfer springtails. I wouldn't be complaining if it were advertised as a starter culture, but this size is touted as a culture you keep around for future terrariums. It's lazy. I had to dump out the top layer of charcoal, which may have contained eggs, so that could have contributed to the 2 months wait. However, there was no chance I was going to open the lid after they hatched and have them jump out everywhere.
F**M
Gotta stay patient
Been about a day so far, still unable to spot any movement but I have found some remains, which at least shows that the springtails were shipped. Giving it a few weeks to see if any eggs will hatch.
K**T
Gotta lot of springtails now!
When the springtails first arrived I thought they were dead, so I cracked open the container and left it for an hour. No activity as far as I could have seen, but you'll never know! These guys are small and fast so you may have to look real closely! Either way, I didn't give up hope and took a sterilite shoe box made one hole at each end of the container with a hole punch and this is vital because it lets the culture breath but also at the same time keep in all the moisture so you don't kill the culture. After that I filled it with close to an inch of coco fiber and dumped the whole culture in (mixing the dirt and charcoal) plus adding plenty of water. Now the most important part to having a thriving culture is heat. So I placed the box on a heat pad and made sure the temp was around 80° fahrenheit inside (set to 90° if you want it to get to 80° btw). Now a tip is to not open the container frequently because it won't mold properly. So let the culture cook! What you feed your springtails depends on you, but what I use is chestnuts and before I received the springtails I let the chestnuts mold first for a little before placing them in the culture. Combined with the needed heat, moisture, and nice moldy food not even a month later I have thriving springtails compared to before when they arrived half dead with no adults seen moving. So be very patient when you get your culture and have everything to properly set it up to thrive. Also don't give up! You'll never know if the eggs are still alive!
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