Online Encyclopedia

TOAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 1035 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TOAD  , a name commonly applied, in contradistinction to

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frog," to tailless batrachians of stout build, with more or less warty skin . Thus, of the two closely related discoglossid genera Bombinator and Discoglossus, the former is called a toad and the latter a frog . But the true toads are the Bufonidae, arciferous batrachians with dilated processes to the sacral vertebra and without any teeth in the jaws . The type of the
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family is our
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common toad, Bufo vulgaris, and round it cluster a large number of
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species of the same genus, and the smaller genera Eupemphix, Pseudophryne, Nectophryne, Nectes, Notaden, Myobatrachus, Rhinophrynus and Cophophryne . That the shape of the
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body is not a safe guide in judging of the batrachians is shown by certain species, such as Bufo
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jerboa, which in its slender form and extremely long limbs surpasses the typical frogs, whilst on the other hand, some true frogs (Rana), adapted to burrowing habits, are absolutely toad-like . The Bufonidae include terrestrial, burrowing, thoroughly aquatic and arboreal types; Rhinophrynus, of Mexico, may be described as an ant-eater . The genus Bufo embraces about roo species, and is represented in nearly every
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part of the
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world except the Australian region and
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Madagascar . Two species are found in the
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British Isles: the common toad, Bufo vulgaris, and the natterjack, Bufo calamita . The former is found almost everywhere; the second, which differs in its shorter limbs with nearly
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free toes (which are so short that the toad never hops but proceeds in a
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running gait) and in usually possessing a pale yellow
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line along the
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middle of the back, is
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local in England, the south-west of Scotland, and the west of Ireland; it is further remarkable for the very loud croak of the
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males, produced by a large vocal bladder on the throat which, when inflated, is larger than the head . Toads
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lay their eggs in long strings, forming double files in straight, jelly-like tubes . A small toad, Pseudophryne vivipara, recently discovered in German East Africa, has proved to be viviparous, this being the only such instance known among tailless bactrachians .

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