Anaxyrus
Anaxyrus is a genus of true toads in the family Bufonidae, consisting of 25 extant species endemic to North America, ranging from southern Canada through the United States to northern Mexico.[1] These robust, terrestrial amphibians are characterized by their warty, glandular skin, prominent parotoid glands behind the eyes that secrete toxic bufotoxins for defense, and a body size typically ranging from 50 to 100 mm in snout-vent length, though some species like the American toad (A. americanus) can reach up to 110 mm.[2] The genus name derives from Greek roots meaning "lordly toad," reflecting their prominence among North American anurans.[3] Established in a comprehensive phylogenetic revision of amphibians, the genus Anaxyrus was separated from the former broad genus Bufo by Frost et al. in 2006, based on molecular and morphological evidence that distinguished North American lineages as a distinct clade. This taxonomic split, published in the Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, resolved long-standing uncertainties in bufonid relationships and restricted Bufo primarily to Old World species.[4] Species within Anaxyrus exhibit diverse habitats, from arid deserts (A. punctatus, red-spotted toad) and montane forests (A. boreas, western toad) to coastal wetlands and grasslands, often favoring areas near ephemeral breeding pools for reproduction.[5][4] Ecologically, Anaxyrus toads are opportunistic carnivores, primarily feeding on insects, arachnids, and small invertebrates, with males possessing a Bidder's organ—a rudimentary ovary that underscores their evolutionary ties to bufonids.[2] Breeding occurs explosively in spring or summer, with males producing trilling calls to attract females; eggs are laid in long strings in shallow water, hatching into tadpoles that undergo metamorphosis in 4–10 weeks.[6] Several species face conservation challenges due to habitat loss, chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis), and climate change, including the federally endangered arroyo toad (A. californicus) and the federally threatened Yosemite toad (A. canorus).[7][8] Despite these threats, common species such as the American toad remain widespread and play key roles in controlling pest populations in their ecosystems.[9]Taxonomy
Classification history
The genus Anaxyrus traces its taxonomic origins to the mid-19th century, when North American toad species were initially classified within the cosmopolitan genus Bufo. The type species, now Anaxyrus americanus, was described as Bufo americanus by John Edwards Holbrook in his 1836 work North American Herpetology, based on specimens from the eastern United States. At that time, Bufo encompassed a broad array of true toads worldwide, with little regard for phylogenetic distinctions among regional clades. Molecular phylogenetic studies in the early 2000s began to challenge this lumping, revealing deep evolutionary divergences within Bufo. A key analysis by Pauly et al. (2004) used mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences from 58 bufonid species to demonstrate that Nearctic (North American) toads formed a monophyletic clade distinct from Old World Bufo lineages, suggesting a single colonization event from the Neotropics. This work highlighted the polyphyly of Bufo and set the stage for taxonomic revision. Building on these findings, Frost et al. (2006) conducted the most comprehensive phylogenetic study of amphibians to date, analyzing over 6,000 base pairs of DNA from 521 species; they formally erected Anaxyrus as a new genus to accommodate 24 strictly North American species previously under Bufo, emphasizing monophyly and biogeographic coherence.297[0001:TATOL]2.0.CO;2/THE-AMPHIBIAN-TREE-OF-LIFE/10.1206/0003-0090(2006)297[0001:TATOL]2.0.CO;2.full) This split, while influential, sparked debate over nomenclatural stability, with some researchers advocating retention of Bufo for familiarity.65[213:POTPOV]2.0.CO;2/Response-to-the-Point-of-View-of-Gregory-b-Pauly/10.1656/08-037.1.full) Anaxyrus is classified within the family Bufonidae (true toads) and order Anura (frogs and toads).297[0001:TATOL]2.0.CO;2/THE-AMPHIBIAN-TREE-OF-LIFE/10.1206/0003-0090(2006)297[0001:TATOL]2.0.CO;2.full) The fossil record of the genus extends to the Middle Miocene (approximately 15–11 million years ago), with species such as Anaxyrus valentinensis known from Nebraska sediments, indicating an early diversification in North America.[10]Phylogenetic relationships
Anaxyrus constitutes a monophyletic clade within the Bufonidae family, consistently recovered as the sister group to Incilius in phylogenetic analyses employing mitochondrial markers including 16S rRNA and cytochrome b genes.[11][12] This positioning is reinforced by multilocus datasets that place the Anaxyrus-Incilius clade as sister to Rhinella, the diverse South American toads previously included in Bufo.[13] The genus Anaxyrus emerged from the historical taxonomic split of North American lineages from the polyphyletic Bufo in 2006.[14] Molecular clock analyses, calibrated with fossil priors and employing relaxed clock models on multi-locus data, estimate the divergence of the Anaxyrus lineage from the Central American genus Incilius at approximately 9.6 million years ago (95% HPD: 6.2–18.1 Ma), during the late Miocene.[15] This timing aligns with biogeographic vicariance events in the Americas, separating Nearctic Anaxyrus from Neotropical relatives.[15] Within Anaxyrus, hybridization is documented, particularly between A. americanus and A. fowleri in overlapping ranges across eastern North America, where hybrids exhibit intermediate morphologies and calls.[16] Such events imply porous species boundaries, with gene flow potentially blurring taxonomic distinctions and influencing local adaptation in contact zones.[17] The fossil record links Anaxyrus to broader Bufonidae evolution through extinct taxa like Bufo priscus, a Middle Miocene species from Europe known from skeletal remains, indicative of early bufonid diversification predating the modern North American radiation.[18]Description
Morphology
Species in the genus Anaxyrus are characterized by a stout, stocky body with a broad head and relatively short limbs, enabling a terrestrial lifestyle with limited hopping mobility. The skin is dry and covered in prominent warts, which are keratinized tubercles providing protection and camouflage, while the dorsal surface often features dark blotches each containing one to several warts.[9][19] Behind the eyes, large parotoid glands are present, secreting bufotoxins—toxic steroids that serve as a chemical defense against predators.[20] Cranial crests, which are bony ridges on the skull covered by skin, vary in prominence across species but are generally well-developed, forming L-shaped or knobbed structures between and behind the eyes.[19][21] The eyes feature horizontal pupils typical of bufonids, aiding in low-light vision, and a distinct oval tympanum is visible on the side of the head, often larger in males than in females as a sexually dimorphic trait.[22] Hind limbs are muscular and adapted for short bursts of hopping, with toes bearing keratinized tubercles for traction; partial webbing occurs on the hind toes in more aquatic-adapted species, such as Anaxyrus californicus.[23] Adults typically range from 2 to 13 cm in snout-vent length (SVL), with females generally larger than males, though sizes vary by species and population—for instance, Anaxyrus americanus averages 5–9 cm SVL.[19][9] This size range and dimorphism influence reproductive behaviors, with males often exhibiting more pronounced secondary sexual characteristics like enlarged tympana during breeding.[21]Coloration and variation
Species in the genus Anaxyrus typically display dorsal coloration ranging from shades of brown, gray, olive, green, or even red to black, frequently marked by darker blotches or spots that enclose one or more warts.[19] These patterns often include a light middorsal stripe in some individuals, contributing to a mottled appearance.[24] Ventral surfaces are characteristically lighter, appearing yellow or white, sometimes with fine dark speckling.[20] The mottled dorsal patterns in Anaxyrus species facilitate blending into surrounding substrates such as soil or leaf litter.[25] Coloration can vary physiologically in response to environmental factors like temperature and humidity, allowing individuals to shift hues within their typical range.[26] Ontogenetic changes are common, with juveniles often exhibiting brighter or less patterned coloration compared to adults, such as reduced blotching in early stages.[7] In some species, like Anaxyrus fowleri, spot size and pattern density increase with age to match growth.[25] Seasonal variations may also occur, influenced by physiological adjustments.[27] Geographic variation manifests in differences among subspecies, for example, Anaxyrus americanus charlesmithi tends toward more intense rusty-red hues, while A. a. americanus shows subdued brown, gray, or olive tones.[28] Such intraspecific polymorphisms highlight adaptive diversity across populations.[29]Distribution and habitat
Geographic range
The genus Anaxyrus is endemic to North America, with its overall geographic range spanning from southern Canada southward to northern Mexico. This distribution reflects the Nearctic focus of the clade, as defined in the taxonomic revision separating Anaxyrus from the polyphyletic Bufo. The genus encompasses approximately 25 species adapted to diverse continental environments across this expanse.[30][1] Core distributional areas include arid deserts of the western United States, such as those occupied by Anaxyrus punctatus in the southwestern deserts from Arizona to northern Mexico; temperate forests of the eastern United States and Canada, where A. americanus predominates from the Atlantic coast to the Great Lakes region; and montane habitats in the southwestern United States, exemplified by A. boreas ranging from Alaska through the Rocky Mountains to northern Mexico. These regions highlight the genus's broad latitudinal and ecological coverage within North America.[9][31] Historically, Anaxyrus species underwent post-glacial expansions northward following the retreat of Pleistocene ice sheets. Current ranges have experienced contractions in some areas due to ongoing climate variability, including warmer temperatures and altered precipitation patterns that limit suitable conditions at range edges.[32] Altitudinal distribution within the genus varies widely, from sea level in lowland species like A. americanus to elevations exceeding 3,000 meters in high-montane taxa such as A. canorus, which inhabits Sierra Nevada meadows between approximately 1,950 and 3,450 meters. Within these geographic bounds, species typically occupy a range of habitat types, including forests, grasslands, and riparian zones.[9][33]Habitat preferences
Species of the genus Anaxyrus generally prefer semi-arid to mesic environments characterized by sandy or loose soils that facilitate burrowing, often in proximity to temporary or semi-permanent water bodies essential for their life cycle.[34][35] These habitats include grasslands, deserts, forests, and riparian zones, where the soil structure allows for easy excavation and retention of moisture.[36][6] In terms of microhabitats, Anaxyrus toads seek shelter under rocks or logs in forested areas, within dunes or scrub in desert regions, and typically avoid dense urban settings in favor of more natural or semi-natural landscapes with vegetative cover.[9][37] For instance, the American toad (A. americanus) is commonly found in wooded areas or fields with ample leaf litter and debris for concealment.[6] These toads exhibit tolerances for varying temperature and moisture levels, often displaying nocturnal activity in hot, arid climates to minimize exposure to daytime heat and reduce water loss, while hibernating underground in colder regions during winter months.[38][6] In mesic habitats, they may be more diurnal but still retreat to moist microhabitats during dry periods.[23] A key adaptation among Anaxyrus species is burrowing into loose soils to escape desiccation during dry seasons or extreme heat, as exemplified by the Great Plains toad (A. cognatus), which constructs shallow burrows in sandy plains to maintain hydration and avoid predators.[39][40] This behavior also aids in hibernation, where individuals dig below the frost line for overwintering.[6]Behavior and ecology
Activity patterns and diet
Species of the genus Anaxyrus are primarily nocturnal, emerging to forage and breed during warm, humid nights, particularly after rainfall, while spending the day burrowed underground to avoid desiccation and predation.[41] This fossorial behavior is especially pronounced in arid habitats, where individuals burrow into loose soil or use rodent burrows during dry periods and overwinter below the frost line. Many species undertake seasonal migrations in spring, traveling up to several kilometers from overwintering sites to temporary breeding ponds or streams, with movements peaking after snowmelt or heavy rains.[42] The diet of Anaxyrus toads is predominantly insectivorous, consisting of ants, beetles, termites, and earthworms, captured through sit-and-wait predation strategies where individuals remain stationary and ambush passing prey.[43] For example, in A. debilis and A. punctatus, ants dominate numerically while beetles and termites contribute significantly to volume, reflecting opportunistic feeding based on local abundance.[43] Juveniles focus on smaller items like mites and small beetles, occasionally including snails or spiders, with rare consumption of small vertebrates such as lizards in larger species.[41] Foraging involves rapid tongue projection, with the tongue stiffened by specialized muscles to extend straight outward, allowing precise capture of evasive insects from a distance of several centimeters.[2] This technique is particularly effective in opportunistic post-rain feeding bouts, when increased insect activity prompts heightened foraging.[41] Metabolic adaptations enable Anaxyrus species to endure arid conditions, including high tolerance to urea accumulation in muscle tissue during aestivation, which allows prolonged fasting and burrowing without lethal toxicity.[41] This urea tolerance, observed in species like A. cognatus, supports survival in xeric environments by maintaining osmotic balance during dehydration stress.Predators and defense mechanisms
Species of the genus Anaxyrus face predation across life stages, with adults primarily targeted by birds such as great blue herons (Ardea herodias), common ravens (Corvus corax), and American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), as well as snakes including hognose snakes (Heterodon platirhinos) and garter snakes (Thamnophis spp.), and mammals like raccoons (Procyon lotor), skunks (Mephitis mephitis), and coyotes (Canis latrans).[22][20] Larval stages, or tadpoles, are especially vulnerable to aquatic predators including fish, predaceous diving beetles (Dytiscidae), dragonfly nymphs (Odonata), backswimmers (Notonectidae), and other amphibian larvae such as those of wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus), which can significantly reduce hatching success and early survival.[22][20] Some predators, like hognose snakes, possess physiological adaptations such as neutralizing enzymes to tolerate the toads' toxins, allowing specialization on Anaxyrus species.[44] The primary chemical defense in Anaxyrus involves bufadienolides, cardiotonic steroids secreted from parotoid glands behind the eyes, which deter most predators by causing bitter taste and toxicity.[45] These compounds inhibit Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase pumps in cardiac muscle cells, leading to elevated intracellular calcium, arrhythmias, and potentially cardiac arrest in susceptible predators.[46] Bufadienolides are present in both adults and tadpoles, with concentrations varying by species, age, and environmental factors, and they also provide antimicrobial benefits against pathogens.[47] Eggs contain toxins that diminish post-hatching, making early larvae somewhat protected but increasingly reliant on other strategies.[20] Behavioral defenses complement chemical protections, including cryptic coloration for background matching to avoid detection, body inflation to appear larger and more intimidating, and distress vocalizations to startle attackers.[48][20] Feigning death, often combined with secretion release, is employed by many Anaxyrus species to mimic unprofitability, while tadpoles form dense schools to confuse predators.[48] Predators that survive initial encounters often learn to avoid Anaxyrus through associative unpalatability, reducing future attacks on the population.[49] As both predators and prey, Anaxyrus species play a key role in ecosystems by consuming large numbers of insects, thereby helping regulate invertebrate populations and supporting agricultural pest control indirectly.[20] Their availability as prey sustains diverse predators, influencing food web dynamics and contributing to biodiversity in North American wetlands and forests.[22]Reproduction and life cycle
Breeding behavior
Species in the genus Anaxyrus exhibit explosive breeding, characterized by mass congregations of adults in temporary ponds or shallow waters following heavy rainfall, with intense reproductive activity typically lasting 1-3 nights.[19] These events are triggered by environmental cues such as warm temperatures (around 14-18°C) and standing water depths of 5-10 cm, often in fishless pools to minimize predation on eggs and larvae.[7] Breeding sites are selected for their ephemeral nature, ensuring rapid larval development before pools dry.[22] Males arrive first and produce advertisement calls from submerged positions or the water's edge to attract females, with call characteristics varying by species to facilitate species recognition. For instance, Anaxyrus americanus males emit a continuous high-pitched trill lasting up to 30 seconds at rates of 24-32 pulses per second.[19] In contrast, Anaxyrus quercicus produces short, high-pitched chirps resembling peeps, often in dense choruses that amplify detectability.[50] These vocalizations serve as signals of male quality, influencing female mate choice based on call duration, rate, and dominance in the chorus. Upon attraction, males initiate axillary amplexus by grasping females around the upper arms, forming pairs that may last several hours to a day.[19] Intense male-male competition often results in multiple males attempting to clasp a single female, leading to "amplexus bouts" where subordinate males are displaced through wrestling.[51] Females exercise choice by selecting males with superior calls or by moving to preferred sites, potentially rejecting unwanted suitors by deflating their bodies to break the grasp.[19] Fertilization is external, with females releasing eggs in long, gelatinous strings (often >10 m in length) while the male simultaneously deposits sperm over them in shallow water (10-30 cm deep).[19] Clutch sizes range from 4,000 to 25,000 eggs per female, depending on species and body size; for example, Anaxyrus boreas averages 12,000 eggs in double-stranded ribbons.[52] The eggs are coated in a translucent jelly matrix that provides buoyancy and protection, sinking to form loose coils on the substrate or vegetation.[9]Development stages
The development of Anaxyrus toads follows a typical anuran life cycle, beginning with eggs laid in long strings in shallow freshwater habitats. Eggs are small, typically 1-1.4 mm in diameter, and enclosed in a gelatinous matrix that provides some protection but leaves them highly susceptible to predation by aquatic insects, fish, and amphibians, as well as fungal infections like water mold (Saprolegnia spp.). Hatching occurs rapidly, usually within 2-7 days for species such as the American toad (Anaxyrus americanus), though times can extend to 10-12 days in cooler conditions; for the southern toad (Anaxyrus terrestris), hatching takes 2-4 days in warm shallow water.[19][21][19] Upon hatching, tadpoles emerge as small, legless larvae, generally dark brown to black with dorsally positioned eyes, internal gills for aquatic respiration, and a prominent tail for propulsion; total length at hatching is under 1.5 cm. These larvae exhibit schooling behavior, often forming dense aggregations in shallow, warm areas of ponds or streams, which may enhance predator avoidance through collective vigilance. Diet is primarily herbivorous or omnivorous, consisting of scraped algae, aquatic plants, and microorganisms, though scavenging or cannibalism on dead eggs can occur; for instance, southern toad tadpoles favor vegetation and algae but may ingest unhatched eggs from deceased females. Metamorphosis, involving tail resorption, limb development, and lung formation, typically spans 4-8 weeks, with the larval period lasting 30-55 days in A. terrestris (beginning at 6.5-11 mm body length) or 7-8 weeks in A. americanus, culminating in small toadlets emerging onto land.[19][21][19][21] Post-metamorphosis juveniles, or toadlets, measure about 1 cm in length and weigh around 0.2 g, transitioning immediately to a terrestrial, carnivorous diet of small insects and invertebrates. They undergo rapid growth, often dispersing up to 400 m or more from breeding sites to avoid competition and predation, but remain highly vulnerable to desiccation in dry environments and mortality from roads or habitat fragmentation during this phase.[19][19] Environmental factors, particularly water temperature, significantly influence development rates across Anaxyrus species; warmer conditions (above 24°C) accelerate egg hatching and tadpole metamorphosis—for example, reducing the larval period to 2.5-7 weeks in the Houston toad (Anaxyrus houstonensis) or extending it beyond two months in cooler waters for the western toad (Anaxyrus boreas)—while also affecting survival by altering predation risks and resource availability. Acidic water (pH below 4.5) can increase tadpole mortality, underscoring the importance of neutral, open-canopy ponds for successful development.[53][22][19]Diversity
Number and distribution of species
The genus Anaxyrus includes 25 extant species and two fossil taxa.[14] The fossil species are Anaxyrus defensor from the late Pliocene/early Pleistocene of Florida and Anaxyrus hibbardi from the late Miocene of Kansas. Species richness is highest in the southwestern United States, where over half of the extant species occur, reflecting adaptations to diverse arid and semi-arid environments. Phylogenetic analyses reveal two primary clades: an eastern clade comprising species like Anaxyrus terrestris, distributed across the southeastern United States in humid coastal plains, and a western arid clade including species such as Anaxyrus debilis, which inhabits dry grasslands and deserts of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico. Overall, the genus ranges from Alaska and southern Canada southward to the highlands of Mexico west of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.[14] Endemism is notable in several species restricted to small geographic areas, such as Anaxyrus baxteri, which is confined to the Laramie Basin in southeastern Wyoming.[54] Recent taxonomic additions include Anaxyrus monfontanus and Anaxyrus nevadensis, both described in 2020 as cryptic species endemic to isolated spring habitats in central Nevada.[55]List of species
The genus Anaxyrus comprises 25 recognized extant species, primarily distributed across North America from southern Canada to central Mexico. The following table provides their binomial names with authorities and years of description, common names where established, brief geographic range notes, and recognized subspecies where applicable. Fossil species assigned to the genus include Anaxyrus defensor (Meylan, 2005), known from the late Pliocene/early Pleistocene of Florida, USA, and Anaxyrus hibbardi (Taylor, 1937), known from the late Miocene of Kansas, USA.[56][14][57]| Scientific Name | Authority, Year | Common Name | Geographic Range | Subspecies (if applicable) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anaxyrus americanus | Holbrook, 1836 | American toad | Eastern and central North America, from southern Canada to northern Mexico | A. a. americanus, A. a. charlesmithi |
| Anaxyrus baxteri | Porter, 1968 | Wyoming toad | Restricted to Mortenson Lake National Wildlife Refuge in the Laramie Basin, southeastern Wyoming, USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus boreas | Baird and Girard, 1852 | Western toad | Western North America, from Alaska to Baja California, Mexico | A. b. boreas, A. b. halophilus |
| Anaxyrus californicus | Camp, 1915 | Arroyo toad | Coastal drainages of southern California, USA, to northwestern Baja California, Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus canorus | Camp, 1916 | Yosemite toad | High-elevation meadows in the Sierra Nevada, central California, USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus cognatus | Say in James, 1822 | Great Plains toad | Great Plains region of central USA and northern Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus compactilis | Wiegmann, 1833 | - | Central highlands of Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus debilis | Girard, 1854 | Green toad | Chihuahuan Desert region of southwestern USA and northern Mexico | A. d. debilis, A. d. insuetus |
| Anaxyrus exsul | Myers, 1942 | Black toad | Endemic to springs around Deep Springs Valley, Inyo County, California, USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus fowleri | Hinckley, 1882 | Fowler's toad | Eastern and midwestern USA, from Great Lakes to Texas | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus hemiophrys | Cope, 1886 | Canadian toad | Northern Great Plains of Canada and USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus houstonensis | Sanders, 1953 | Houston toad | East-central Texas, USA, with small populations in surrounding areas | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus kelloggi | Taylor, 1938 | Little Mexican toad | Pacific coastal lowlands of western Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus mexicanus | Brocchi, 1879 | - | Central and southern Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus microscaphus | Cope, 1867 | Arizona toad | Southwestern USA (Arizona, New Mexico) and northwestern Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus monfontanus | Gordon, Simandle, Sandmeier & Tracy, 2020 | Hot Creek toad | Hot Creek Spring area, central Nevada, USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus nelsoni | Stejneger, 1893 | Amargosa toad | Oasis Valley and Ash Meadows, southern Nevada and southeastern California, USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus nevadensis | Gordon, Simandle, Sandmeier & Tracy, 2020 | Railroad Valley toad | Railroad Valley, central Nevada, USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus punctatus | Baird and Girard, 1852 | Red-spotted toad | Arid regions of southwestern USA and northwestern Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus quercicus | Holbrook, 1840 | Oak toad | Coastal plain of southeastern USA, from Virginia to Florida | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus retiformis | Sanders & Smith, 1951 | Sonoran green toad | Sonoran Desert of Arizona, USA, and Sonora, Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus speciosus | Girard, 1854 | Texas toad | Western Texas, USA, to northern Mexico and southeastern New Mexico | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus terrestris | Bonnaterre, 1789 | Southern toad | Southeastern USA, from North Carolina to Florida and Louisiana | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus williamsi | Gordon, Simandle & Tracy, 2017 | Dixie Valley toad | Hot springs of Dixie Valley, Churchill County, Nevada, USA | None recognized |
| Anaxyrus woodhousii | Girard, 1854 | Woodhouse's toad | Western and central USA, from Canada to northern Mexico | A. w. australis, A. w. velatus, A. w. woodhousii |