crapaud dorée


Golden toads used to live in high areas in tropical forests up the town of Monteverde of Costa Rica. Those five centimetres long toads’ male are orange almost fluorescent; females are yellow with black spots. They are considered extinct since 1989. Their reproduction’s necessary condition where quite delicate : between April and June, where it rains the most, they get out, reproduce and females then lay eggs in temporary ponds and brooks created by rain. This toad was a lot dependant on rain. Not enough rain, ponds get dry and larva die. Too much, brooks get down the mountains and dispatch larva. 1987 dryness created a bloodbath: 29 on a 43,500 potential larva lived. (This phenomena was observed by Marty Crump, herpetologist, who think El Niño and global warm are responsible for this animal’s extinction.

(This picture is a sculpture, not a real toad.)


source : flickr (Thomas Hawk) and wikipedia | crapaud doré on batraciens-reptiles.com | golden toad on bagheera