i'm not sure if these qualify as tree frogs, technically they live on the edge of water bodies and climb tall plants, called African reed frogs or sedge frogs in common names. i have some adults i got from a breeder at International Amphibian Days 2 years ago.my issue is that the only data i can find on them is very limited-including one coffee table book that actually does a better job than the 'help' book. it mentions that in captivity their egg viability drops, probably due to inbreeding. i have 1 big female and 2 males (had 3 males but the dominant male drowned the other one that dared to call). these are all new to me-also frog breeding is new to me, i have tons of luck with salamanders (my speciality), but i only keep about 20 frogs, and these were the first to breed for me. i need to know if anyone else is keeping these-specifically these, not 'hyperolius ssp.', the man i got them from was dutch or german (had an accent but his kids didnt, i believe he lives here in the states) does any one know of him? since my brood is from 1 pair of parents that may be related i need to find others with these frog and do a gene swap.