Dendrobates azureus
🔤 Taxonomy
Dendrobates azureus remains a very common hobby name. In modern taxonomy, keepers will often see it treated within Dendrobates tinctorius as the blue Suriname form.
English common names used in the hobby:
- Blue poison frog
- Azureus poison frog
German common names used in the hobby:
- Blauer Pfeilgiftfrosch
📌 Description
The frog traditionally known as Dendrobates azureus is one of the most recognizable dart frogs in captivity thanks to its intense blue ground color and contrasting dark spotting. It is a medium-sized poison frog that is often visible in well-structured planted terrariums.
Adults usually reach about 4.5-5.5 cm. Mature females are often a little broader and heavier than males, especially around the hips and abdomen. With stable husbandry, captive animals can live 10-15 years or more.
Like other captive-bred poison frogs, these animals are not dangerous in the dramatic way that many beginners imagine. Their care challenge is not toxicity but microclimate control: stable temperatures, good water management, and frequent access to tiny live prey.
🌍 Distribution
Dendrobates tinctorius “azureus” is native to southern Suriname, especially the Sipaliwini region. In the wild it is associated with humid forest and open rocky-forest mosaics with leaf litter, roots, stones and low shelter.
For captive care, the useful lesson from this distribution is:
- stable humidity with fresh airflow rather than stagnant wetness
- leaf litter, roots, plants, or other natural cover at the level the species actually uses
- clean water sources or deposition sites appropriate to the species
- moderate temperatures with night drops where they occur naturally
- a planted enclosure that creates several small microclimates

🌡 Climate across the native range
Monthly climate normals from the Sipaliwini region associated with the azureus form:
Sipaliwini Savanna — Suriname (azureus core locality)
| Month | Min °C | Mean °C | Max °C | RH % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 22.1 | 25 | 29.4 | 77 |
| February | 22 | 24.8 | 29.1 | 78 |
| March | 22.1 | 25 | 29.4 | 79 |
| April | 22.1 | 24.8 | 29 | 83 |
| May | 21.9 | 24.5 | 28.6 | 87 |
| June | 21.5 | 24.5 | 28.7 | 85 |
| July | 21.1 | 24.6 | 29.1 | 82 |
| August | 21.5 | 25.5 | 30.5 | 77 |
| September | 22.3 | 26.9 | 32.6 | 68 |
| October | 23 | 27.6 | 33.5 | 63 |
| November | 23 | 27.2 | 32.7 | 67 |
| December | 22.6 | 26.2 | 31.1 | 72 |
Weather data by Open-Meteo.com · CC BY 4.0 · Monthly normals calculated by Herpeton Academy from daily archive values.
Location references use GBIF.org occurrence data where available; original occurrence records retain their source dataset licenses.
⚖️ Legal status
As checked against current official sources in April 2026, Dendrobates azureus is listed in CITES Appendix II. Under EU wildlife-trade rules, that generally corresponds to Annex B unless a stricter measure applies.
The species is not relevant to the Bern Convention because it is not native to Europe. Local ownership, collection, transport, import, sale, breeding, and animal-welfare rules may still apply. Captive-bred stock with clear origin records is strongly preferable.
🤌 Husbandry
Dendrobates azureus does best in a planted tropical terrarium with stable humidity, strong visual cover, and careful water management. It is often bolder than some other poison frogs, but that does not mean it is forgiving of poor conditions.
Pairs and carefully managed groups are both seen in the hobby, but crowding should be avoided. Mature females can be assertive toward one another in small enclosures.
Useful husbandry priorities include:
- Stable moderate temperatures without overheating
- Reliable drainage under the substrate
- Plenty of leaf litter and low cover
- Frequent access to very small live prey
- Quiet routines with minimal disturbance
🧪 Filtration and water
These frogs do not need a large open water area. Instead, they need consistently clean moisture management inside the enclosure. Misting water should be safe for amphibians, and the substrate system should allow excess water to drain away from the surface.
Key points include:
- Use dechlorinated or reverse-osmosis water for misting
- Prevent standing puddles in walking areas
- Keep drainage layers or false bottoms functioning properly
- Clean any breeding containers or deposition sites promptly
A terrarium that looks humid but smells stale is usually too wet or poorly drained.
💡 Lighting
Dendrobates azureus is diurnal and benefits from a regular photoperiod of roughly 10-12 hours. Bright plant lighting is useful when the frogs still have access to broad leaves, cork, roots, and other shaded zones.
Low-level UVB can be used carefully, but full retreat from the UVB zone must always be possible. Night lighting is unnecessary.
For UV planning, treat this species as Ferguson Zone 1. Aim for about UVI 0.5-1.0 in the upper exposed area, while leaving retreats and a gradient down to shaded areas near zero UVI. This usually points to a low-output UVB tube such as a ShadeDweller-style or 2-7% T5, chosen for the enclosure height; measure with a Solarmeter 6.5 when possible, because reflector, mesh, distance, and lamp age change the real exposure.
🌡 Heating and temperature
This species prefers moderate tropical temperatures. A daytime ambient range of about 22-26°C is suitable for most setups, with night values around 20-22°C.
Suitable approximate values:
- Daytime ambient: 22-26°C
- Warm daytime peak: around 26-27°C
- Night: 20-22°C
Temperatures above about 28°C are dangerous, especially when humidity is high and cooling is limited. Heat stress is one of the fastest ways to lose these frogs.
💧 Humidity and water
Humidity should remain high, often around 80-100% with some daily fluctuation. The goal is a humid enclosure with moist retreats and healthy leaf litter, not a swamp of permanently saturated surfaces.
Good practice includes:
- Regular misting adjusted to ventilation
- Damp leaf litter with occasional top drying
- Moist lower layers over an effective drainage base
- Fresh airflow that prevents stale condensation
The balance between humidity and cleanliness matters more than chasing a single number all day.
🌿 Enclosure and decoration
A terrarium with strong floor area is usually more useful than a very tall enclosure. For a pair or small group, many keepers start around 45 x 45 x 45 cm or larger, with more floor area improving long-term stability.
The enclosure should include:
- A drainage layer or false bottom
- Humid tropical substrate
- Generous leaf litter
- Cork bark, roots, and low climbing structure
- Live plants such as Philodendron, Epipremnum, bromeliads, and mosses
These frogs often appear much bolder when they can move through cluttered cover rather than across bare open substrate.
🪱 Feeding
Dendrobates azureus is insectivorous and needs frequent meals of very small live prey. Variety and supplementation are both important.
Suitable foods include:
- Drosophila melanogaster
- Drosophila hydei
- Springtails, especially for younger frogs
- Bean beetles
- Tiny roach nymphs or very small crickets for larger adults where appropriate
Juveniles usually need daily feeding. Adults are commonly fed five to six times per week in smaller portions. Calcium should be used regularly, while broader supplements are added more sparingly according to the feeder range and product schedule.
🩺 Common problems
The most common problems are overheating, chronic stress from crowding or sparse decoration, poor sanitation, weak supplementation, and hydration trouble caused by bad drainage balance.
Warning signs include:
- Weight loss
- Reduced hunting response
- Staying hidden unusually often
- Repeated poor sheds
- Belly or foot irritation
- Sudden lethargy during hot weather
Any persistent swelling, skin lesion, abnormal posture, or prolonged refusal to feed should be treated as a serious issue and checked by an amphibian veterinarian.
📌 Conclusion
Dendrobates azureus is one of the most visually striking poison frogs in captivity, but its care is built on fundamentals rather than appearance: stable temperatures, clean humidity, strong drainage, and reliable feeding.
In a mature planted enclosure with sensible group management and excellent water control, these frogs can be active, long-lived, and exceptionally rewarding to keep.
📚 Sources and further reading
- CITES Appendices and Species+ trade database, checked April 2026
- EU wildlife trade regulations and annex references, checked April 2026
- GBIF species backbone and occurrence data for taxonomy and distribution context
- IUCN Red List and specialist husbandry references where applicable