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Paul E.

Moler
Wildlife Biologist
Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish
FROGS AND TOADS
Commission
Wildlife Research Laboratory
Gainesville, Florida 32601

Fig. 1. Great Plains toad, Bufo cognatus

Damage Prevention and Habitat Modification Trapping


Control Methods Around hatchery ponds, keep vegeta- Funnel traps.
tion closely mown and remove
Capture
Exclusion emergent vegetation and other
types of cover. Capture by hand or gig at night.
Seal all openings 3/16 inch (0.5 cm) or
larger to exclude frogs. Frightening Egg masses may be removed with a
fine-meshed net.
A frogproof fence can be used for Not applicable.
nonclimbing species, but will be in- Shooting
Repellents
effective against treefrogs and a few Allowed in some states, but often not
related species. None are registered.
safe in areas requiring control.
On fish farms, mesh tenting over Toxicants Some states permit shooting only
ponds will serve to exclude frogs as during daylight hours.
None are registered.
well as birds and other predators.
Fumigants
None are registered.

PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF WILDLIFE DAMAGE — 1994


Cooperative Extension Division
Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
United States Department of Agriculture
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Animal Damage Control
F-9
Great Plains Agricultural Council
Wildlife Committee
Identification mice, and small birds. In natural habi- tions of the west has seriously affected
tats, fish usually comprise less than 5% some native species. In at least some
Frogs and toads are amphibians with of the diet of the bullfrog. On fish cases, these introductions may have
four legs and no tail. They may have farms, as many as 30% of bullfrogs resulted from the unintentional release
skin that is smooth and moist or dry have been found to contain fish. of tadpoles during fish-stocking pro-
and warty, but they have no scales or grams. Considerable labor is required
claws. The front legs are short, but the General Biology, to separate tadpoles from loads of fry.
hind legs are muscular and elongated Reproduction, and Only in rare instances do frogs cause
for hopping or jumping. The popular Behavior any significant damage. Some species
distinction between frogs and toads is (toads, for example) produce skin
somewhat artificial; basically, toads Although some species spend most of secretions that are toxic if ingested.
are a particular group of frogs. their adult lives away from water, This does not normally present a prob-
Throughout this chapter, the term frog most frogs native to North America lem for people, and pets usually learn
will be used to include toads. North must return to water to lay eggs. Some to avoid such frogs. A few species
American frogs range in body size species breed during the cooler winter (giant toad, Colorado River toad) pro-
from the 11/16-inch (1.7-cm) little and spring months, whereas others duce especially copious or toxic secre-
grass frog to the 8-inch (20-cm) bull- breed during the warmer months. Fol- tions, and there have been cases in
frog. lowing rain, males begin calling from which dogs have died after biting
breeding sites. Each species has its them.
Range own distinctive call, and females
The noise sometimes produced by
respond only to the calls of their own
large breeding choruses of frogs fol-
At least 85 species of frogs are native species. Several recordings of frog calls
lowing heavy rains can be annoying to
to the United States, and there are are available, and four are listed at the
humans. These aggregations usually
three well-established exotic species. end of this chapter.
last only a few days, however, and sel-
There is no part of the country that is
Eggs are fertilized by the male as they dom warrant control. Similarly, com-
not home to at least a few species.
are released by the female. Hatching plaints sometimes arise when large
occurs a few days later. The aquatic numbers of young frogs leave the
Habitat tadpole stage may last as little as 2 to 3 ponds en masse, but the frogs disperse
weeks in some species of spadefoots or quickly, and the “problem” will take
Frogs occur in almost all nonmarine as long as 2 years in some northern care of itself in a few days.
habitats. “True” frogs (genus Rana) populations of bullfrogs.
and treefrogs predominate in the more
humid east. In the drier Great Plains Frogs are typically most active at Legal Status
and western regions, toads and night. Some species aggregate around
spadefoots are typically more numer- artificial lights and feed on the insects Laws pertaining to frogs vary from
ous. Whereas some species are seldom attracted there. Frogs are an important state to state. Some rare species (for
found far from permanent water, component of the vertebrate food example, Houston toad, Wyoming
others return to water only seasonally chain and are consumed by a variety toad, Pine Barrens treefrog) may be
to breed. Some desert species spend of predators, including fish, snakes, fully protected under federal or state
most of their time beneath ground, turtles, wading birds, raptors, skunks, laws. Seasons and bag limits may
venturing to the surface only following and raccoons. Individuals of many apply to other species (bullfrogs, for
rains. species may live 12 to 15 years, but life example). Permits to remove frogs that
expectancy is much shorter in the are causing damage are available in
Food Habits wild. some states. Contact your state wildlife
department to determine the legal
Most frogs have a two-phased life Damage status of frogs in your area.
cycle, including an aquatic larval form
The greatest potential for economic
(tadpole) and a terrestrial or semi-
aquatic adult form. Tadpoles are pri-
damage is at fish farms and hatcheries. Damage Prevention and
Tadpoles compete for food intended Control Methods
marily herbivorous, feeding on algae
for fish, and adult bullfrogs may actu-
and decaying organic matter. Adults,
ally feed on the fish. Losses are said to Exclusion
on the other hand, are carnivorous,
be high at some fish farms. One study
consuming almost any prey that can be The effectiveness of exclusion depends
suggested that the mere presence of
overpowered. Although the diet con- in part on the species involved. Most
high densities of tadpoles retarded
sists primarily of insects, crayfish, and species responsible for potential or real
reproduction of fish. Although the
other invertebrates, larger frogs occa- damage can be effectively excluded
bullfrog is native to most of the eastern
sionally take snakes, other frogs, fish, from limited areas. Giant toads (south-
United States, its introduction to por-

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ern Florida, extreme southern Texas) Caution: traps may capture other non- Acknowledgments
or Colorado River toads (southern target species, including snakes,
Arizona, extreme southeastern Califor- turtles, and small mammals. Figure 1 by Randy Babb, Arizona Game and
nia) can be excluded from pet enclo- Fish Department.
sures by placing a strip of 1/8-inch Capture
(0.3-cm) mesh hardware cloth along Frogs can be located at night by the re-
the outside base of the perimeter fence.
For Additional
flection of their eyes in the beam of a
The hardware cloth should be buried headlamp. They can be collected by
Information
at least 4 inches (10 cm) in the ground gig or hand. Captured frogs may be
and should extend to a height of at Altig, R. 1970. A key to the tadpoles of the
eaten, or where allowed by law, sold continental United States and Canada.
least 20 inches (50 cm). A similar exclu- to provide additional economic Herpetol. 26:180-207.
sion fence can be used to control returns. Check with your state wildlife Bogert, C. M. Sounds of North American frogs:
breeding aggregations of nonclimbing agency regarding seasons, bag limits, the biological significance of voice in frogs.
species in small, urban stormwater legal methods of take, and restrictions (Record or cassette. Calls of 50 species.)
detention basins or to exclude these on sale. Distributed by Rounder Records,
species from small hatchery ponds. Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Smithsonian
Folkways Records, Rockville, Maryland.
Although treefrogs and some related Shooting
species will readily climb such a fence, Boyd, S. H. 1975. Inhibition of fish reproduction
most treefrogs normally breed in sea- Although shooting is allowable in by Rana catesbeiana larvae. Physiol. Zool.
some states, it is not safe in some areas 48:225-234.
sonal, fish-free waters. In addition,
their eggs and tadpoles are readily requiring control. Conant, R., and J. T. Collins. 1991. A field guide
to reptiles and amphibians: eastern and
eaten by fish, so they do not usually central North America. Houghton Mifflin
present a significant problem on fish Economics of Damage Co., Boston. 450 pp.
farms. and Control Corse, W. A., and D. E. Metter. 1980. Economics,
adult feeding and larval growth of Rana
Habitat Modification catesbeiana on a fish hatchery. J. Herpetol.
Frogs eat many insect pests. With the
Keep the shoreline of ponds free of 14:231-238.
exception of fish farms, control mea-
emergent vegetation to minimize cover sures for frogs are seldom warranted Duellman, W. E., and L. Trueb. 1986. Biology of
for adult frogs and allow predators to and, in most cases, should be discour- amphibians. McGraw-Hill Book Co., New
York. 670 pp.
assist in control. Efforts to directly aged. On fish farms, the economic
remove adult frogs at night will also be damage depends in part on the unit Elliot, L. 1992. The calls of frogs and toads:
facilitated. Eastern and Central North America.
value of the fish produced. Corse and (Cassette and booklet. Calls of 42 species.)
Metter (1980) provided data suggest- Chelsea Green Pub. Co. Post Mills, Vermont.
Frightening ing that a 350-pond farm that pro-
Johnson, T. R. Talking toad and frog poster and
Not applicable. duced goldfish might sustain $42,000 cassette. (Includes 20 frogs found in
in annual losses to bullfrogs, whereas Missouri.) Missouri Dep. Conserv., Jefferson
Repellents the same facility might sustain only City.

None are registered. $12,600 in losses if it produced golden Kellogg, P. P., and A. A. Allen. Voices of the
shiners, a less valuable species. It fol- night. (Calls of 34 species found in eastern
Toxicants lows that losses might be still higher North America). Houghton Mifflin Co. (for
the Cornell Lab. Ornith.), Boston.
on farms specializing in valuable
None are registered.
aquarium fishes. Stebbins, R. C. 1985. A field guide to western
reptiles and amphibians. Houghton Mifflin
Fumigants Co., Boston. 336 pp.
None are registered.

Trapping
Place funnel traps along the base of a Editors
Scott E. Hygnstrom
perimeter fence. Toads may also be Robert M. Timm
trapped by burying several 5-gallon Gary E. Larson
(19-l) buckets flush with the ground
surface beneath an overhead light.
Toads attracted by the insects drawn
to the light will fall into the buckets
and be unable to escape.

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