Poisonous amphibian
Poisonous amphibians are amphibians that produce toxins to defend themselves from predators.
Amphibians
Most toxic amphibians are poisonous to touch or eat. These amphibians usually sequester toxins from animals and plants on which they feed, commonly from poisonous insects or poisonous plants. Except certain salamandrid salamanders that can extrude sharp venom-tipped ribs, and two species of frogs with venom-tipped bone spurs on their skulls, amphibians are not known to actively inject venom.Toxic Frogs and Toads
An example of poison ingestion derives from the poison dart frog. They get a deadly chemical called lipophilic alkaloid from consuming a poisonous food in the rainforest. They are immune to the poison and they secrete it through their skin as a defense mechanism against predators. This poison is so efficient, the native people of the South American Amazon rainforest use the frogs' toxins on their weapons to kill their prey, giving the frogs their nickname the "poison dart frog".| Image | Scientific name | Active agent | Distribution |
| Dendrobatidae Poison Dart Frogs | lipophilic alkaloid toxins: allopumiliotoxin 267A, batrachotoxin, epibatidine, histrionicotoxin, pumiliotoxin 251D | humid, tropical environments of Central and South America | |
| Mantella genus Golden frogs or Malagasy poison frogs | alkaloid toxins | Madagascar | |
| northern corroboree frog | pseudo-phrynamine | Southern Tablelands of Australia. | |
| southern corroboree frog | pseudo-phrynamine | Southern Tablelands of Australia. | |
| Bruno's casque-headed frog | Unknown injectable venom | Brazil | |
| Greening's frog | Unknown injectable venom | Brazil | |
| Panamanian golden frog | Zetekitoxin AB, Bufadienolide | Central Panama. | |
| American toad | Bufotoxin | eastern United States and Canada. | |
| Colorado River toad | 5-MeO-DMT, Bufotenin | southeastern California, New Mexico, Mexico and much of southern Arizona | |
| Rhinella arenarum | Bufotoxin | Argentina from the Chubut Province northward, Bolivia east of the Andes, southern Brazil, and Uruguay | |
| Asian giant toad | Bufotoxin | Mainland Southeast Asia and the Greater Sundas. | |
| Colombian giant toad, Blomberg's toad | Bufotoxin | western Colombia and northwestern Ecuador | |
| western toad | Bufotoxin | western British Columbia and southern Alaska south through Washington, Oregon, and Idaho to northern Baja California, Mexico; east to Montana, western and central Wyoming, Nevada, the mountains and higher plateaus of Utah, and western Colorado. | |
| common toad, European toad Bufo bufo | bufotalin, bufalitoxin and bufotoxin | Europe | |
| Asiatic toad or Chusan Island toad | Bufotoxin | East Asia. | |
| African common toad or guttural toad | Bufotoxin | Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Réunion, Somalia, South Africa, Ethiopia, Eswatini, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. | |
| Japanese common toad, Japanese warty toad or Japanese toad | bufotalin, Bufotoxin | Japan and is present on the islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu and Shikoku | |
| Fowler's toad | Bufotoxin | eastern United States and parts of adjacent Canada | |
| cane toad | Bufotoxin, Bufotenin | Rio Grande Valley in South Texas to the central Amazon and southeastern Peru, and some of the continental islands near Venezuela Introduced in Australia, Florida and Hawaii, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, the Ogasawara, Ishigaki Island and the Daitō Islands of Japan, most Caribbean islands, Fiji and many other Pacific islands | |
| Asian common toad | Bufotoxin | South and Southeast Asia. | |
| Peltophryne peltocephala | Bufotoxin | Cuba | |
| oak toad | Bufotoxin | southeastern United States. | |
| African common toad, square-marked toad, African toad | Bufotoxin | Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Sudan, and Uganda. | |
| Gulf Coast toad | Bufotoxin | eastern and southeastern Mexico and Central America as far south as Costa Rica. | |
| European green toad | Bufotoxin | mainland Europe, ranging from far eastern France and Denmark to the Balkans and Western Russia. |