Boreal toad
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Anaxyrus boreas boreas

The boreal toad (Anaxyrus boreas boreas ) is the nominate subspecies of the western toad (Anaxyrus boreas ). They are commonly found in the Southern Rocky Mountains, and their population has recently been on the decline due to an emerging amphibian disease, chytrid fungus. The boreal toad is currently listed as an endangered species by Colorado and New Mexico. It is known in Colorado as the only alpine species of toad.

Appearance

Boreal toads lack a cranial crest, and can be distinguished from the other western toad subspecies, the California toad, by looking at its underbelly, which is covered by a considerable amount of dark blotches. Adult males on average are between 2.4–3.1 inches and females are 2.9–3.9 inches Their coloration can range from brown to green and they have a distinct white middorsal stripe. Both sexes have dry, warty skin and oval parotoid glands. Male boreal toads have no vocal sac, and therefore have no mating call.

Distribution

Geography

Continents
Biogeographical realms

The boreal toad is currently found in Northern New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, Washington, Oregon, British Columbia, Alberta, and Southeast Alaska. It prefers high-altitude wet habitats (8,000–12,000 ft in elevation) such as lakes, marshes, ponds, bogs and quiet shallow waterHabitat selection for western toads is important because they require open water for breeding, and they can die if they are too exposed to seawater.

Diet and Nutrition

Being omnivorous, boreal toads feed on a wide variety of insects and invertebrates as well as aquatic and non-aquatic plants. Their diet includes grasshoppers, beetles, flies, detritus, algae, and mosquitos.

Mating Habits

The breeding season is usually from May to Late July and occurs in marshes and still waters. Females on average lay about 3,000 to 8,000 eggs. The tadpoles take around two months to develop and are usually black in color. Survival of tadpoles to metamorphosis has been shown to be higher in aquatic environments with high trout presence, low chytrid fungus presence, and in non-permanent spawning pools. Trout presence decreases predation by aquatic insects, lower chytrid fungus concentrations help tadpoles through their highest vulnerability life-stage, and ephemeral spawning pools are warmer, leading to faster and larger tadpole growth.

Population

Reintroduction efforts

Attempts to reintroduce Boreal Toads to both previously occupied and new locations has had mixed results. In Colorado, almost all attempts at repatriation or translocation of mature individuals or eggs have failed. These studies have failed to result in a diverse age structure of mature adults, especially lacking in sexually mature individuals. However, more recent reintroduction attempts have proven successful with a mature individual translocation effort made in Utah in 2019 and a tadpole reintroduction effort made in Colorado in 2019 also. The success of these efforts is due to innovations made in their processes. In the Utah project, they utilized the benefits of small refugia-like population dynamics. Chytrid fungus is known to spread at much lower rates in smaller populations, so by introducing smaller amounts of toads to these isolated locations, the chytrid effect was lowered. In the Colorado project, the utilized a probiotic bath for the tadpoles called "Purple Rain" that strengthened the skin microbiome of the tadpoles, providing resistance to chytrid fungus.

References

1. Boreal toad Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boreal_toad
2. Boreal toad on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/3179/176026188

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