皇冠体育app下载

Skip to main content
FWS Home
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

Utility (Top) navigation

  • About Us Forward
    Back
    • About Us
    • Mission & Vision
    • Leadership
    • Our Organization
    • Our Facilities
    • Regions
  • Laws & Regulations Forward
    Back
    • Laws & Regulations
    • Laws, Agreements & Treaties
    • Hunting Regulations
  • Library Forward
    Back
    • Library
    • Categories
    • Collections
  • Home
  • Services Forward
    Back
    • Services
    • Duck Stamps Forward
      Back
      • Duck Stamps
      • Buy a Duck Stamp or E-Stamp
      • Buy a Junior Duck Stamp
    • Fish Stocking
    • Importing & Exporting
    • Consultation & Technical Assistance Forward
      Back
      • Consultation & Technical Assistance
      • ESA Section 7 Consultation
      • Habitat Conservation Planning (HCPs)
      • Candidate Conservation Agreements
      • Conservation Banking
      • Conservation Benefit Agreements
      • Coastal Barrier Resources Act Project Consultation
      • Coastal Barrier Resources System Property Documentation
    • Financial Assistance
    • Species Management
    • Investigational New Animal Drugs (INADS)
    • Permits
    • Search All Services
    Duck Stamp 2019
    Duck Stamps
    One of the easiest ways that anyone can support bird habitat conservation is by buying duck stamps.
  • Species Forward
    Back
    • Species
    • Explore Taxonomic Tree
    • Find a Species
    Mexican long tongued bat
    Interest story
    Bats: 鈥淭he Coolest Mammals on Earth鈥�
  • Visit Us Forward
    Back
    • Visit Us
    • Events
    • National Fish Hatcheries
    • National Wildlife Refuges
    • Outdoor Recreation
    • Recreation Passes
    • Locations
    A bus with birders tours Black Point Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    Scenic Drives
    Tour routes of great scenic drives on National Wildlife Refuges.
  • Get Involved Forward
    Back
    • Get Involved
    • Careers and Internships
    • Volunteering
    • Friends Partnerships
    • Learning Opportunities
    • Education Programs
    • Events
    • Partnerships Forward
      Back
      • Partnerships
      • Partnership Categories
      • Partner List
    A volunteer at siletz bay plants trees
    Volunteer
    Search for volunteer opportunities around the country
  • Newsroom Forward
    Back
    • Newsroom
    • Press Releases
    • Congressional Testimony
    • Media Contacts
    A hairy brown bison and calf stands nose to nose at Neal Smith National Wildlife Refuge in Iowa.
    Wild Things
    News about wonderful wild things and places
  • Initiatives Forward
    Back
    • Initiatives
    • Combating Wildlife Trafficking
    • Director's Priorities
    • Climate Change
    • Fishing
    • Invasive Species
    • Pollinators
    • Protecting Wildlife
    A distant view of two polar bears standing on a pebbled shoreline.
    Climate Action
    FWS is taking steps to mitigate climate impacts
  • I want to Forward
    Back
    • I Want To
    • Report Wildlife Crime
    • Do Business with FWS
    • Volunteer
    • Find a Job or Internship
    • Visit a Refuge
    • Buy a Duck Stamp
    • Apply for a Permit
    • Find Funding
    • Find Training
    Refuge biological team staff sample for nekton in a marsh pool.
    Wild work
    Search employment opportunities with USFWS

Search

Enter the terms you wish to search for.

Can You Tell a Spadefoot from a Toad?

a western spadefoot frog with light and dark brown blotches and vertical slit pupils
Image Details
Can You Tell a Spadefoot from a Toad?
Dec 12, 2023

Written By

Image
Grayscale U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service logo
Cal Robinson

It may look like a toad, but spadefoots are an amphibian of their own. With seven species of spadefoots across the country, can you tell the difference between a spadefoot and a true toad?

A four panel comic. Panel 1 says, can you tell a spadefoot and a toad? three tips to help you out. There is a colored drawing of a western spadefoot and a western toad side by side. Panel 2 says, tip number 1. spadefoots have cat-like vertical pupils, while true toads have horizontal pupils. There is a new drawing of the face of the spadefoot and the toad, showing spadefoots vertical pupil and toads horizontal pupil. Panel 3 says, tip number 2. spadefoots have a single hard black spur on the bottom of their back feet for digging burrows, while most true toads do not have such a large or dark spur. There is a drawing of the underside of a spadefoots back foot showing the large black spur, and the underside of a toads back foot showing small yellow spurs. Panel 4 says, tip number 3. spadefoots smell like peanut butter! true toads smell like... not that. The drawing shows a happy spadefoot on top of a jar of peanut butter and the toad next to the jar looking disgruntled. End comic.
Image Details

Story Tags

Adaptation
Amphibians
Illustrations

Written By

Image
Grayscale U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service logo
Cal Robinson

Published

Dec 12, 2023
Wildlife Wonders

Facilities

Sacramento Fish and Wildlife Office

Related Stories

an illustration of a vernal pool fairy shrimp with cat ears against a pink sparkly background. The shrimp is saying "am I cute?" and is blushing.
Wildlife Wonders
The Obscure Species Club
Apr 29, 2022
A four panel comic where a tipton kangaroo rat has a magic act where she cuts a california legless lizard in half in a magic box, but it turns out that the lizard can lose and regrow its tail so the lizard is fine. It's meant to educate viewers on the lizard's adaptation of losing and regrowing a tail to get away from predators.
Obscure Species Club: Obscure Magic
Nov 3, 2023
Biologist holding one toad in one hand and two toads in another hand.
Endangered Species Act
Building roads to save Yosemite toads
Dec 2, 2020

Latest Stories

Our Partners
Scaling up brook trout conservation in the Delaware River watershed
Jun 11, 2025
River Herring Returning up the Merrimack River
Habitat Restoration
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Partners Announce More Than $23.4 Million for Fish Conservation
Jun 11, 2025
A golden orange fish swims along the bottom of the sandy ocean
Our Partners
Spring of Resources: New Research Vessel in American Samoa
Jun 9, 2025

Pagination

  • Previous page
  • Current page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Next page
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Logo

皇冠体育app下载 with others to conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people.

Footer Menu - Employment

  • Careers & Internships
  • Contracting

Footer Menu - Site Links

  • Leadership
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Contact FWS

Footer Menu - Legal

  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of Information Act
  • Notices
  • Disclaimers
  • Information Quality
  • Vulnerability Disclosure Policy

Footer Menu - External Links