Toad
Related Category: Vertebrate Zoology
name applied to certain members of the
amphibian order Anura, which also includes the
frog. Although there is no clear-cut distinction between toads and frogs, the name
toad commonly refers to those species that have relatively short legs, stout bodies, and thick skins, and are less aquatic as adults than the long-legged, slender-bodied frogs. Sometimes the term is restricted to the so-called true toads, members of the family Bufonidae. These are characterized by warty skins and prominent parotid glands behind the eyes and as a group are the most terrestrial of the order. In most the feet are only slightly webbed. They range in length from about 1 to 7 in. (2.518 cm). Most species belong to the genus
Bufo; members of these species spend much of the time on land, generally near water. They generally live in cool, moist places and absorb moisture through the skin. The white fluid that they exude through the skin, as well as from the parotid glands, is very poisonous and causes intense burning if it comes in contact with the eyes or mouth; however, contrary to an old belief, it does not cause warts. Toads, like frogs, move on land by jumping and feed on insects and grubs. Also like frogs, they usually lay their eggs in water in strands of jelly. Fertilization is external. The egg hatches into a
tadpole, a gilled, aquatic, larval toad that undergoes metamorphosis into the adult. There are about a dozen
Bufo species in the United States, among them the common American toad (
Bufo americanus), Fowlers toad (
B. fowleri), of the E United States, and the red-spotted toad (
B. punctatus), of the Southwest. The spadefoot toads, burrowing toads of the family Pelobatidae, are represented in the United States by several species of the genus
Scaphiopus. Toads are classified in the phylum
Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Amphibia, order Anura.