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American Toad

Bufo americanus

Description:

The American toad, sometimes called the hop toad, is 2-4½ inches in length. It can vary in color from tan, brown, reddish brown, or olive green. Some American toads are solid in color, but others may be patterned. It has a light white to yellow belly that usually has black or gray spots on it. It has dark round spots on its back with one or two warts in each spot. Its skin contains glands that produce a white toxin that helps protect the toad from predators. Some American toads may have a stripe down the middle of their backs. Males are usually smaller than females and may have a dark throat. The American toad uses its tongue to snap up insects. It may also eat spiders, earthworms, slugs and other invertebrates. The American toad mates from March to July, depending on the latitude. Males will go to shallow breeding ponds and call out to attract females with a distinctive high-pitched musical trill that can last for up to 30 seconds. When the female arrives at the breeding pond, the male grabs her until she discharges her eggs. The male then fertilizes the eggs by discharging fluid with sperm in it on the eggs. The eggs are encased in long spiral tubes of a jelly-like substance. They are laid in two separate strings with thousands of eggs in each string. The eggs are placed on submerged vegetation in shallow water. The tadpoles hatch in 3-12 days and become toads in 50-65 days. The American toad is usually nocturnal. It spends daylight hours under cover. When cold weather arrives, it burrows into the ground and hibernates. Toads don't cause warts, but the American toad produces a toxin in glands behind its eyes that can be harmful if swallowed or if it gets in your eyes. The toxin protects it from some predators. For predators that aren't affected by the toxin, the American toad will puff itself up so that it looks bigger.

Habitat:

The American toad can be found in areas with lots of moisture and plenty of insects. It is often found in parks, yards, farmland, prairies, mountain areas and forests.

Notes:

I raised the toad tadpoles myself, then released the toadlets back in the wild. Be sure to check out the photo series of them growing!

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7 Comments

EmilyMarino
EmilyMarino 10 years ago

Great transformation pictures!

antondazomb
antondazomb 11 years ago

thats cool, love the transformation

Geodialist
Geodialist 11 years ago

A project like this one typically takes a lot of planning and persistence. In this case, the results are clearly worth the effort. Nice work, Keith!

keithp2012
keithp2012 11 years ago

Thank You for the great comments I really appreciate it!

Mark Ridgway
Mark Ridgway 11 years ago

Excellent keithp2012..... great work.

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 11 years ago

great series!

keithp2012
keithp2012 11 years ago

Added a video with more growth photos, enjoy!

keithp2012
Spotted by
keithp2012

North Babylon, New York, USA

Spotted on Aug 10, 2012
Submitted on Aug 10, 2012

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