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  1. #1
    Founder John's Avatar
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    Default Re: Texas Toad uses toe as lure

    The Texas Toad I saw doing it was male. Interesting point about the handedness - I wonder if amphibians can be "handed".
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    Default Re: Texas Toad uses toe as lure

    That is a very good question about "handedness". I have no idea how or if it is true with frogs, but I have witnessed Old World Chameleons that show preference when sleeping. Some always have the left front foot first on the branch, others the right.

    What I wonder about with toads is, is this truly a luring tactic or just a nervous recation, like the tip of a cat"s tail when hunting. I wonder only because in B. nebulifer literature states their diet in the wild is primarily coleoptera. Other than tiger beetles and caterpillar hunters, I am unsure how effective baiting would be.
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    Founder John's Avatar
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    Default Re: Texas Toad uses toe as lure

    It truly is a luring tactic.
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  4. #4
    coltiger
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    Default Re: Texas Toad uses toe as lure

    All my toads do that with their toes. It is also a good sign that your toad is alert and healthy. I had a European Green Toad that my wife named Twinkle...not sure why but she said it was cause she thought it was cute doing the toe thing.lol

  5. #5
    nicodimus22
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    Default Re: Texas Toad uses toe as lure

    My baby Fowler's toads have done this too. They will spot a bug, sneak along like a cat, and their toes will just freak out. At first I was a little concerned, as it looked like a possible neurological problem to me, but then I read of some other people's toads doing the same thing. Just one of those weird little habits.

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    Default Re: Texas Toad uses toe as lure

    It's pretty standard behavior for any Bufo relative, including Dart Frogs (which are closer to Toads than frogs, phylogenetically).
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  7. #7
    Greg M
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    Default Re: Texas Toad uses toe as lure

    My Woodhouse's toads all do this, many times without apparently looking at the prey item. As soon as it moves though, the prey is grabbed. I've always been curious what prey item actually responds to this. The usual domestic fare (Dubia, crickets, etc.) certainly don't - in fact, the roaches usually freeze if anything moves near them, and the movement is too subtle to scare a prey item into moving IMHO. It seems to me that a predatory insect/animal might be the best guess - I could see it attracting smaller frogs/toads, for example...

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