Toads

Hainault Forest

AMPHIBIANS

TOADS

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    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4792 10/03/2018

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    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4793 03/10/2023

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    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Michael Trump TQ4792 13/06/2023

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    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4793 18/03/2022

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  • Slide title

    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4792 07/07/2017

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  • Toad

    Slide title

    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4792 10/03/2018

    Button
  • Toad

    Slide title

    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4793 03/10/2023

    Button
  • Toad

    Slide title

    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Michael Trump TQ4792 13/06/2023

    Button
  • Toad

    Slide title

    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4793 18/03/2022

    Button
  • Toad

    Slide title

    Common Toad Bufo bufo

    ©Raymond Small TQ4792 07/07/2017

    Button

Toads have short dumpy legs not built for jumping so they tend to move around by crawling. Their skin is warty unlike frogs that usually have smoother skin. Toads are renowned for migrating in large groups to breeding waters as spring approaches. Sometimes observers mistake males on backs of females as mothers carrying children. However, the young are tadpoles that have to fend for themselves after hatching. Toads are more likely to be seen in springtime when it is the breeding season. Toad spawn is laid in ribbons attached to aquatic vegetation. When the young toads appear following the tadpole stage they are often seen on paths, sometimes in huge numbers. During autumn a Toad spends most days hidden in a lair under logs and debris that it has hollowed out. It emerges at dusk to hunt and can travel some distance at night. The collective name for a group of Toads is a "Knot".

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