dcsimg

Description

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
The body length of this toad is usually between the range of 1 1/2"-3 1/4" (3.7-8.3 cm). Generally brownish, greenish to light gray above. It has a whitish stripe down the back and dark spots with reddish warts. Two prominent tubercles on the hind feet assist in burrowing. Males tend to have a dark-colored throat (Stebbins 2003).

References

  • Alberta Government (2002). Amphibians of Alberta. Crown Copywrite, http://www3.gov.ab.ca/srd/fw/amphib/ct.html.
  • Blackburn, L., Nanjappa, P., and Lannoo, M. J. (2001). An Atlas of the Distribution of U.S. Amphibians. Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana.
  • Greeen, D.M., and Pustowka, C. (1997). ''Correlated morphological and allozyme variation in the hybridizing toads Bufo americanus and Bufo hemiophrys.'' Herpetologica, 53, 218-228.
  • Hamilton, I.M., Skilnick, J.L., Troughton, H., Anothony, P., Russell, G., and Powell, L. (1998). ''Status of the Canadian Toad (Bufo hemiophrys) in Alberta.'' Alberta Environmental Protection, Wildlife Management Division, and the Alberta Conservation Association, 12, 8-21.

license
cc-by-3.0
author
Zaina Khan
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Distribution and Habitat

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
Anaxyrus hemiophrys inhabits several regions in Canada and the United States as well. In Canada, these toads occur in Alberta, Manitoba, Northwest Territories, and Saskatchewan. In the United States, they are found in Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming (Blackburn 2001). A. hemiophrys occurs in grassland, ponds, potholes, lakes, aspen parkland, streams, areas with soft soil and along the range of the boreal forest regions. Habitat may have a very limited amount of vegetation, or even none at all (Hamilton 1998). Eggs are laid in the shallow water of lakes, ponds, quiet streams, marshes, potholes, and roadside ditches (Stebbins 2003).
license
cc-by-3.0
author
Zaina Khan
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
Anaxyrus hemiophrys is diurnal. During the night, it retires to sandy or vegetated areas, where it burrows in. However, it does become active during warm nights. This toad is active from late March to September (Stebbins 2003). It feeds on a variety of worms, beetles, and ants (Alberta Government 2002). Breeding season is from May to July, depending on the area. Breeding usually occurs in shallow areas of lakes, ponds or even temporary bodies of water. The female lays a single strand of eggs, totaling up to about 7000 eggs. Depending upon the temperature of the water, the eggs will hatch 3-12 days later (Alberta Government 2002). Canadian Toads have some defensive mechanisms to divert predators. When they are in danger, they increase their body size by inflating their bodies, or "play dead" when in immediate danger. Sometimes they startle their predators by crying loudly. They can also produce a thick white noxious secretion from the parotoid glands on the sides of their necks (Green 1997).
license
cc-by-3.0
author
Zaina Khan
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
Many factors are contributing to the decline of Anaxyrus hemiophrys, particularly loss of wetlands and possibly drought (Green 1997). Loss of breeding and hibernation habitat has also impacted this species (Hamilton 1998). Translocation efforts for Wyoming populations of A. hemiophrys failed (Trenham 2001).
license
cc-by-3.0
author
Zaina Khan
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Canadian toad

provided by wikipedia EN

The Canadian toad (Anaxyrus hemiophrys), also known as the Dakota toad, is a species of toad that ranges from the prairie regions of western Canada south to parts of the United States upper midwest. It belongs to the family Bufonidae, the "true" toads.[2][3] Its specific name is derived from the Latin word hemiophrys, meaning eyebrow, which refers to its pronounced cranial crest between and behind the eye.[4] Anaxyrus hemiophrys displays the typical toad characteristics, they lack a tail and teeth, they have horizontal pupils and their dry skin is thick and warty.

Description

The Canadian toad can grow to around 7.6 cm (3 in) in length. Fully grown adult males are usually 5.6 to 6.9 cm (2.2–2.7 in), while females are a little bigger between the ranges of 5.6 and 7.9 cm (2.2–3.1 in)[5] and they weigh between 35 and 55 g.[6] Their colouring is described by Cope (1886) as "brown, marked on the back with a median yellowish line, and two to three rows of brown spots of medium size on each side of it."[7] Each spot has one to two tubercles in their centers which are redder in colour than the rest of the spots. He also identified two spots on the upper lip, one below the tympanum and a large spot that extends from below the parotid gland to near the front of the humerus.[8] The parotid gland is narrow and secretes a toxin to protect it from predators.[9] The toxins can cause irritation to the eyes and mouth and if it is ingested it can cause illness, but despite this toxin they are safe to handle.[10]

The coronal crests of Anaxyrus hemiophrys are well defined. The interorbital crests are narrow, relatively sharp-edged, non-porous and are widely separated. They run relatively parallel throughout most of their length, as far posterior as the level of the coronal crests. Posterior to that level they flare laterally to join the postorbital crests, delimiting the anterolateral edge of the postcoronal plane. Postcoronal plane is clearly defined and sloped posteroventrally. It is smooth and subtriangular, its apex directed posteriorly and it ends at the foramen magnum. Its sides are delimited anteriorly by short parietal crests. Particularly useful externally is the interorbital crest shape. In Anaxyrus hemiophrys the posterior ends of the crests almost invariably diverge at least slightly where they join the postorbital crests (usually not evident externally).[11] This provides the easiest way to distinguish Anaxyrus hemiophrys from its close relative Anaxyrus americanus, who share some of the same territory. In Anaxyrus hemiophrys the postorbital crests are absent and the interorbital crests are fused to form a boss between the eyes, whereas, in the Anaxyrus americanus the interorbital crests are well separated and join distinct postorbital crests at a right angle.[12] The boss is a soft tissue structure characteristic of this genus. It is anchored by the previously discussed structures of the skull.[13]

On the back of the external face of the tibia are several rows of dermal tubercles. The heel of the hind foot when the hind leg is extended comes level to the posterior edge of the orbit. The tubercles of the metatarsals are large. The internal one is very wide and prominent with an extensive acute edge and the external one is smaller with a free cutting edge that is transverse to the length of the tarsus.[14]

Taxonomy and systematics

Anaxyrus hemiophrys was first described in 1886 by Edward Drinker Cope in the Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society as Bufo hemiophrys. Cope describes the anatomical characteristics and superficial characteristics, comparing them with other related species. Cope determined that the Anaxyrus hemiophrys differs from most of the other North American "Bufo" species because of the lack of postorbital crests and in having spots on its belly.

The closely related Anaxyrus baxteri (the Wyoming toad) was once considered a subspecies of the Anaxyrus hemiophrys. It is a relict population that is believed to be a remnant from when the Anaxyrus hemiophrys, or its ancestors, range was larger.[15]

The range of territory covered by Anaxyrus hemiophrys is fairly large although it has been shown to be declining in southern regions of Alberta.[16] In Canada Anaxyrus hemiophrys' range extends from a small southern patch in the Northwest Territories down through eastern and central Alberta. It spreads east from there through most of Saskatchewan and into southwestern Manitoba. In the United States its range goes from northern Montana and heads east into North Dakota. Once in North Dakota it dips south into the northeastern corner of South Dakota and also enters northwestern Minnesota.

Ecology

Diet

The tadpoles of Anaxyrus hemiophrys eat plant debris and other nutrients found in the waters in which they were spawned by way of suspension feeding.[17] Juvenile Anaxyrus hemiophrys' dine mainly on small ground dwelling Coleoptera (beetles). The adult Canadian toad's diet is mainly insects, the most important being Coleoptera (beetles) and Hymenoptera (ants, bees, wasps, and sawflies). The small amount of non-insect food they consume is mainly small spiders.[18]

Reproduction

Breeding for Anaxyrus hemiophrys typically commences during early emergence in late April to early May and goes until August or September. It takes place in aquatic environments. The male grasps the female in a process called amplexus. The female deposits the eggs in shallow water and the male fertilizes them with his sperm as they are being deposited. Eggs are laid in the shallows of lakes, ponds, and other similar bodies of water. The water contains vascular plant debris, new grass shoots, and/or sparse cattail.[19] This setting provides some shelter for the eggs by helping to prevent water flow from washing them away and it provides nutrients for the tadpoles when they hatch.

Life cycle

Anaxyrus hemiophrys lays eggs in strings of 6000 eggs and can lay up to 20,000 eggs each year.[20] The eggs take around four to five days to hatch. The tadpoles live in the water where they hatched for 7–11 weeks. During that time they go through metamorphosis into juvenile toads, feeding on the plant nutrients in the water by suspension feeding. Juveniles stay near the water and are usually found in large numbers near a breeding area. Adult Anaxyrus hemiophrys can be found living near lakes, streams, irrigation ditches and wetlands.[21] Anaxyrus hemiophrys reaches maturity at around one year old in males and two years old in females. They live to be anywhere between seven and twelve years old with the oldest living in the middle of the latitudinal range sampled.[22]

Torpor

The process of torpor (hibernation) proceeds as early as late August. The toads burrow in the earth and create little holes to sleep in. These create small mounds known as mima mounds. Each mima mound may contain hundreds of toads.[23] They stay there for the duration of the fall and winter, burrowing deeper as the soil temperature drops.[24] Individual toads usually pick the same spot for torpor each year. Emergence begins once the soil thaws and the toads can dig their way out.[25]

Notes

  1. ^ IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2015). "Anaxyrus hemiophrys". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2015: e.T54661A56844532. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2015-4.RLTS.T54661A56844532.en. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  2. ^ Green (1983)
  3. ^ Frost (2014)
  4. ^ Cogger & Zweifel (1998)
  5. ^ Lannoo (2005)
  6. ^ Taylor, Williams & Mills (1999)
  7. ^ Cope (1886)
  8. ^ Cope (1886)
  9. ^ Wittliff (1962)
  10. ^ "Search - the Encyclopedia of Earth".
  11. ^ Smith et al. (1998)
  12. ^ Green (1983)
  13. ^ Smith et al. (1998)
  14. ^ Cope (1886)
  15. ^ Lanoo (2005)
  16. ^ Hamilton et al. (1980)
  17. ^ Lannoo (2005)
  18. ^ Moore & Strickland (1954)
  19. ^ Lannoo (2005)
  20. ^ "Canadian Toad: Nature Snapshots from Minnesota DNR: Minnesota DNR". Archived from the original on 2010-04-21. Retrieved 2010-03-19.
  21. ^ "Bufo hemiophrys – Canadian toad – Northern Rockies Natural History Guide". Archived from the original on 2010-06-21. Retrieved 2010-03-18.
  22. ^ Eaton et al. (2005)
  23. ^ "Canadian Toad: Nature Snapshots from Minnesota DNR: Minnesota DNR". Archived from the original on 2010-04-21. Retrieved 2010-03-19.
  24. ^ Feder & Burggren (1993)
  25. ^ Lannoo (2005)

References

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN

Canadian toad: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The Canadian toad (Anaxyrus hemiophrys), also known as the Dakota toad, is a species of toad that ranges from the prairie regions of western Canada south to parts of the United States upper midwest. It belongs to the family Bufonidae, the "true" toads. Its specific name is derived from the Latin word hemiophrys, meaning eyebrow, which refers to its pronounced cranial crest between and behind the eye. Anaxyrus hemiophrys displays the typical toad characteristics, they lack a tail and teeth, they have horizontal pupils and their dry skin is thick and warty.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN