The toad's habitat is mostly dry climates but geographically it is found in Australia , polar regions, Madagascar, Polynesia and other little islands of south America .
That is the habitat they have adapted to.
Any bugs which they are familiar with in their habitat. The toads' diet mostly consists of the common house fly.
to live in sand by the lake and somethimes swim and there food is flys
the cane toad lives all around the world
mixture of water and land and leaves
It would have to be like a Texas or Mexican desert.
The desert regions of southern U.S. and Mexico.
No, spadefoot toads inhabit North American deserts and are not found in the Sahara.
Puerto Rican Crested Toads, or simply Puerto Rican Toads, are listed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service as a threatened species because of habitat loss and pressure from other species that have been introduced to the island.
Frogs."Toads" are not, scientifically speaking, "a thing". Frogs and toads are together in the order Anura and whether a given animal is commonly called a "toad" or a "frog" has more to do with its appearance and habitat than any real valid taxonomic distinction. (The technical way of putting that is that toads are not a clade, but toads and frogs together are.)Scientifically, a toad is just a frog that happens to have dry, leathery skin and/or live primarily on land.
Well, all of the big toads would need a lot of room, so all of them would become cannibals and eat each other until one is left. Then that toad would be happy. SO a toad, not toads, could live in a small habitat.
Sand toads primarily feed on insects and other small invertebrates, such as spiders and worms. They are opportunistic feeders and will consume whatever prey is available in their environment. Their diet can vary based on the availability of food sources in their habitat.