Rhinella marina


Cane Toad

Frog Calls

Call recorded by Damian Lettoof

Call recorded by Paul Doughty

Calling Period [TBC]

Jan
Not specified
Feb
Not specified
Mar
Not specified
Apr
Not specified
May
Not specified
Jun
Not specified
Jul
Not specified
Aug
Possible
Sep
Yes
Oct
Peak
Nov
Peak
Dec
Yes

Species Information

Description

A very large species of toad reaching up to 15 cm in body length, and occasionally attaining 25 cm. Adult toads have a light brown or yellow-brown back, with darker patches and spots. The skin is dry and warty. The belly is white or yellow, sometimes with grey mottling. The pupil is horizontal, and the iris is gold with distinct black spotting. Fingers are unwebbed and toes are fully webbed. Young toads often have a grey back, with distinct yellow or red spots or patches. Adults have large parotid glands on the shoulders, which secrete toxins when the toad is under threat. These toxins often kill Australian native predators that try to eat the toad, which has resulted in massive ecological damage as the toad expands into new areas in vast numbers.

Habitat

[TBC]

Breeding Biology

Eggs are laid as very long strings in nearly all fresh water bodies. Tadpoles can reach a total length of up to 3 cm, and are black in colour. They often swim in large schools at the bottom of water bodies and take one month to develop into toads, although tadpoles in colder areas can take longer, and tadpoles in warm shallow water can develop in just 10 days. Breeds during any time of the year.

Similar Species

Adult toads, with their very large body size, dry warty skin, and large parotoid glands on the shoulders, do not look similar to any of Australia's native species. Young toads, however, look similar to many Uperoleia and Crinia species, but lack colourful markings on the groin and backs of the thighs.

Distribution

Distribution map for Rhinella marina
[Image Caption TBC]

Conservation Status What does it mean?

Federal Conservation Status (EPBC Act)

Unlisted

IUCN Red List

Least Concern