Our friend the Sonoran Green Toad is a small, colorful toad who lives in southern Arizona and northern Sonora, Mexico! They spend most of their life underground and are mostly found during breeding season! (photo by Robert Dobbs)
Our friend the Cyprian Green Toad lives on the island of Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean and is the only species of toad found there! They are a common sight around any body of water on the island! (photo by Philippe Geniez)
Our friend the Flat-headed Toad is also known as the Big-eared Toad and the Big-eyed Dwarf Toad! They live in many countries throughout Southeast Asia! Their eyes, eardrums, and parotoid glands are all usually nearly the same size! (photo by blackdogto)
Our friend the Southern Round-gland Toad is also known as the Dry Forest Toad, or even better in Spanish as the Sapo Chiquito de Bosque Seco! They live in extreme southern Mexico and through Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua! (photo by Josue Ramos Galdamez)
Our friend the Ornate Forest Toad lives in southeastern Brazil and maybe as far inland as Argentina and Paraguay! They are highly polymorphic and have many different colors and patterns ranging from browns with symmetrical patterns to bright yellow without patterns! (photo by Lucas Mantelo Cruz)
Our friend the Noellert's Toad lives in the rainforests of southwestern Sri Lanka! They are an uncommon toad found in isolated areas that is sometimes also found along the forest edge near rubber plantations and tea estates! (photo by Edward Wong)
Our friend the Campbell's Rainforest Toad lives in eastern Chiapas in Mexico, Guatemala, western Honduras, and the Maya Mountains of Belize! They look similar to the quite common Gulf Coast Toad, but unlike that toad they tend to keep to themselves! (photo by Jason Headley)
Our friend the Córdoba Toad lives in the high-altitude plateau of central Argentina's Córdoba and San Luis provinces! They prefer rocky areas where they hide under rocks during the day and come out at night to feed! (photo by Franco Montaño)
Our friend the Udzungwa Glandular Tree Toad was first described as a new species just a few months ago! Like other toads in genus Nectophrynoides, they do not lay eggs and instead give birth to fully developed toadlets! (photo by John Lyakurwa)
Our friend the Eastern Persian Toad is also known as the Central Asian Toad and the Oblong Toad! They are a tetraploid species, with four chromosomes, believed to have originated from cross-breeding between the Ladakh Toad and the Turan Toad! (photo by Faezeh Fatemizadeh)