No, it does not travel in 'packs.'
Here's one: A Sonoran Desert Toad has a long sticky tongue for catching prey.
yes it does
Here's one: A Sonoran Desert Toad has a long sticky tongue for catching prey.
carnivores
they just do by being awesome. and hiding in the ground where it is cool and shady.
depends.............it could be up 2 5in wide and 9in long
A horned toad often occurs in the Sonoran Desert region, from the 2/ 3/4.
No, there are no poisonous reptiles in the Sonoran Desert. There are, however, a number of venonousreptiles - rattlesnakes, coral snakes and the Gila monster. A poison is something you need to eat to be injured or die. A venom must be injected. I person can safely eat a rattlesnake. However, a person might suffer a severe injury and die if bitten by a rattlesnake.
"Waahhh" is the call of the Sonoran Desert Toad (Bufo alvarius, Ollotis alvaria).Specifically, the voice of the Sonoran Desert Toad is a gentle garbling of less than a second. It is repeated about every 3-4 seconds. In its nasality it is similar to the call of Woodhouse's Toad (B. woodhousii), but softer and briefer. It may be heard between May and July, especially after very heavy summer rains.
Mostly large crickets, but also a pinky or a hopper mouse every once and a while
There is no species called 'desert toad.' It is just a generic term referring to any toad living in a desert.
Toad.