Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Japanese Mountain Toad

Bufo japonicus

Description:

A large Japanese Mountain Toad (Japanese: Nihon hikigaeru) spotted near the peak of Mount Junigatake, in Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan. This is one of the biggest amphibians in Japan. Adults are between 8-18 cm long; tadpoles are 3.5-4 cm long. They have the classic toad traits of poisonous, warty skin and, bulging eyes. Male toads are yellowish-brown and females are darker. Some have red splotches, and there are black markings on the belly. There is a black belt along the flanks of the body, bordered with white stripes. They are terrestrial and have dry skin.

Habitat:

Grasslands and woodlands. They can be found in large parks in cities, but are now rare in gardens. You are most likely to see them on the road after it’s been raining. They breed from April tp May, each female laying between 6,000 to 15,000 eggs in shallow water in ponds, ditches and swamps. Tadpoles become toadlets by early June.

Notes:

Toads have a highly developed sense of smell, which helps them find their way back to the breeding pond they lived in as a toadlet, two-three years before. Once there, males will clasp anything that is about the same size as a female toad. If this happens to be a male toad, the clasped male will make a release call, and the errant male will move on. If he clasps a female after she has laid her eggs, she vibrates her body, and again he will release her. When he finds a female before she has laid her eggs, he clasps her in a state known as amplexus (as in the photo). This can last up to 12 hours. After she lays her eggs, he releases his sperm. Males fight strongly to achieve amplexus with a female. Sometimes females are even killed by the pressure exerted by masses of sexually excited males.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

3 Comments

Jae
Jae 3 years ago

Cool spotting, SargonR :) I would personally also go with Bufo japonicus, though its appearance does look similar to Bufo gargarizans and Bufo torrenticola. But to be honest I don't know the distribution range of both species in Japan.

Ornithoptera80
Ornithoptera80 3 years ago

I would agree with (Bufo japonicus). Here is one that looks similar, https://www.zoochat.com/community/media/...

SargonR
SargonR 3 years ago

I am not 100% certain on the ID for this one, so second opinions are welcome if someone has one. Thanks.

SargonR
Spotted by
SargonR

Fuefuki, Yamanashi, Japan

Spotted on Aug 14, 2020
Submitted on Aug 14, 2020

Related Spottings

Bufo bufo Bufo bufo European toad Gewone pad (bufo bufo)

Nearby Spottings

Spotting Spotting Coral Fungi Dusky Puffball
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team