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Toad patrol volunteers are ensuring frisky amphibians can cross the road to reach their mating grounds

Cane toad
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

During February and March, volunteers head out after dark with buckets and florescent jackets to stand on roads across the UK. These are the toad patrols, and they help an amphibian with love on its mind.

Early spring is the start of the breeding season for common toads (Bufo bufo to scientists). A warm, wet evening is the perfect cue for males to embark for a pond where they hope to find a mate. Females usually arrive a few weeks later, but they only stay long enough to mate and spawn.

Males, who outnumber the females, must engage in gladiator-style battles to win mates. In one pond scientists studied in Sweden, there were . The scientists reported intense competition, with only 20.5% of males breeding successfully. The male grabs hold of the female for several days, and as the female begins laying eggs, he fertilizes them. Toads lay a long double string of eggs that are black in color, unlike the mass of eggs laid by frogs.

After that, the parents begin to depart the pond. The spawn they leave behind takes around 16 weeks to grow into toadlets. You'll often find the toadlets leaving a pond en masse during a wet summer evening, darting for cover to avoid getting eaten. Outside of the , toads spend their time in woods, grassland and gardens until spring begins and they start their migration.

Stubbier than frogs, with shorter legs, toads crawl to breeding ponds, which can be away. Their destination is typically a familiar one. that over 80% of adults that survived to breed the following year returned to their of origin.

You may wonder why a species that has made this migration for millions of years needs the help of a . Toads are equipped for the journey to their breeding ponds, but they are not built to withstand the obstacles and barriers that people have put in their way. The natural world has been split apart by roads. Britain has , on which 20 tons of toad is estimated to be .

What toad patrols have taught us

If a road has lots of toads crossing in the spring, it can be registered with and a patrol set up to ferry toads across it. The charity Froglife is committed to the conservation of all amphibians, reptiles and their habitats, and has coordinated toad patrols for over 35 years.

Toad patrollers are tasked with recording how many amphibians they help across the road in an evening and how many they find dead. Volunteers are also asked to record the number of days in which a patrol is active each season and how many people take part. This helps scientists understand whether any changes in recorded toad numbers are not just a result of more people submitting data. In 2023, there were in the UK, which helped over 115,000 toads to cross a road safely.

The information gathered by these patrols has shown that toad numbers have declined by in some areas of the UK, but the reasons are unclear. The loss of ponds for breeding and disruption to migration routes are among the .

Roughly half of the UK's ponds were . Those that remain are in a generally poor state. It is no surprise that toads have continued to decline despite the best efforts of volunteers, who have been venturing out on dark, damp evenings since the early 1980s.

analyzed how effective the patrols were for conserving toads. The authors mentioned a period in Cambridgeshire in the mid-1990s, when volunteers dwindled each year because of declining toad numbers at crossings.

This period still saw significant toad casualties, and it took several years before people realized that toad populations could be reduced by road traffic. By this point, local ponds, despite being protected, saw only small numbers of toads breeding and hardly any toads at the crossing because the was so depleted.

from Wind in the Willows may have enjoyed zooming around in his sports car, but reckless driving on is causing real toads to decline. With ever smaller populations, toads need all the help they can get to ensure that adults arrive at their breeding ponds safely.

The Toads on Roads project is one way you can help support . See if there is .

Provided by The Conversation

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Citation: Toad patrol volunteers are ensuring frisky amphibians can cross the road to reach their mating grounds (2025, March 11) retrieved 2 June 2025 from /news/2025-03-toad-patrol-volunteers-frisky-amphibians.html
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