they dig with there back legs to where they can keep an eye out for predators while making there home...... at least I think so.......:->
spadefoot toads survive the dry conditions of the desert by burying themselve in the ground ...Hope it helped
the spadefoot toad can copy the enviroments condition around them
land and water
She is Ben teacher.
No, spadefoot toads inhabit North American deserts and are not found in the Sahara.
YEP!
They dont get along
Spadefoot toads back into their burrow by moving their feet with spades in a circular motion. Other than breeding season, the adults do not move around much, they are a sit and wait predator.
their important to the desert beacause they eat like all the flies and other insects and insects
Spadefoot toads (several species) inhabit nearly all desert areas of the American southwest. They spend almost their entire lives underground and only emerge after a heavy rain.
Spadefoot toads, like all toads, are carnivores and do not eat vegetation, except when they are tadpoles, when they eat freshwater algae and other water plants. Adult toads eat insects and invertebrates, such as flies, grasshoppers, spiders, beetles, crickets, grubs, slugs, centipedes, millipedes and worms.
In the United States there are a variety of toads and salamanders to be found in the deserts. Most spend almost the entire year underground and only emerge during the rainy season. Examples: spadefoot toads and tiger salamanders.