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How does human handling effect frogs and toads? |
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Saxicolous
New Member Joined: 10 Oct 2013 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Posted: 11 Oct 2013 at 5:15pm |
A few weeks back I found a small baby toad at a busy retail park motionless in the sun outside a store entrance. Because there was no safe area to put it I decided to take it home where there’s woodland and carried it for 20-25 minutes. It didn’t look the picture of health when I found it but it became lively in my hand and acted normal but by the time I’d gotten home it looked dreadful and had it’s mouth open wide and was floppy and unresponsive. I figured it had overheated or was lacking oxygen from being in my partially closed warm hands so long, I wasn’t quite sure if it was dead or not so I put it in my pond in case it was still alive for it to cool down and rehydrate. A couple of hours later I moved it from the pond to a well-covered damp flowerbed and hid it under leaves, by that time it’s mouth had closed but it still didn’t move and I thought it was dead. 24 hours later I checked on it and it was indeed alive still but was acting abnormal, it was alert and lively but appeared brain damaged as it used its back legs abnormally and kept toppling upside down and was unable to right itself. Again it had its mouth wide open. After another 24 hours it was dead. |
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will
Senior Member Joined: 27 Feb 2007 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 1830 |
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Hi, I don't think you should beat yourself up about the toad; it sounds like it was suffering from something at the start. Juvenile amphibians are delicate at the best of times, and I don't think human skin can be 'poisonous' to frogs and toads - what is true is that you should handle them as rarely as possible in case of transferring chytrid fungus etc from one amphibian to another, and if possible with moist hands as the dryness of our skin could damage their delicate and permeable skins. Hope that helps, Will
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MancD
Member Joined: 05 Jun 2011 Status: Offline Points: 38 |
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Agree with Will, sounds like it was suffering from something when you found it. Always best to avoid placing amphibians found in terrestrial habitats into ponds as they may well have been out of the water for months and their bodies will have become adapted to living terrestrially. It may not have appreciated being dunked in a pond! More important is to avoid moving amphibians around. If it was suffering from disease, you may have risked spreading disease from the population the toad was from to any population using your garden. Given that the little blighter only held out for 48 hours it is unlikely that this happened, but worth keeping your eyes peeled for any amphibians in your garden with similar ailments.
Duncan
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