Australian Frogs

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Common name: Giant Burrowing Frog

Scientific name: Heleioporus australiacus

Family: Myobatrachidae

Description

This frog is usually black, chocolate brown or grey on its back. The sides of the body have scattered yellow spots and a stripe runs from under each eye through to each tympanum (tight membrane covering the entrance to the ear). The skin on the back is rough and warty and breeding males often have black spines on the backs of their fingers. The belly of this frog is white and granular. The head is rounded and very broad. The toes have some slight webbing.

Size

90 mm

Habitat

Mainly restricted to the Hawkesbury Sandstone region. This frog lives around sandy creek beds with Yabby burrows.

Call

An owl-like call "oo..oo..oo".

Breeding

Males call in spring and autumn from burrows in the banks of creeks or dams. The males either construct these burrows or use existing ones built by Yabbies. Females lay their eggs in the burrows and the tadpoles are eventually flushed into the creek when it rains.

Eggs

Are laid in foamy masses in the male's burrow or amongst dense vegetation.

Tadpoles

Are large in size and very plump. The body colour is usually black or very dark grey to brown. These tadpoles are very slow moving.

Similar species

Sometimes this species is mistaken for the introduced Cane Toad, Bufo marinus. The vertical pupils that this species has in combination with its yellow colouring and lack of glands behind the head easily distinguishes it from this introduced pest.

Suspected threatening processes

Population Size

An estimate of the total number of adults present in the species entire range is 10001-50000 individuals, or size is unknown but suspected to be large. Some factors affecting population size and distribution are known, but 1 or more major factors are unknown.

Population trend in Australia over the past 50 years

Population size known to be decreasing.

Knowledge of population trend in Australia

Nation-wide monitoring, but not with statistical sensitivity.

Population concentration

Not known to concentrate or exist in discrete locations. (e.g. the number of sites in which individuals group together either seasonally, such as breeding sites, or they may occupy discrete habitat patches within the broader landscape, such as discrete water bodies or drainage units.)

Ongoing management activities in Australia

Management mostly related to enforcement of conservation laws.

Reproductive potential for recovery

The average number of eggs deposited per adult female per year is >1000 eggs/female/year. Minimum age at which females are known or suspected to first reproduce is 4-6 years.

Range size in Australia

The size of the geographic area over which the taxon is distributed: 1001-80000 km² (up to 1% area of Australia or about the area of Tasmania).

Distribution trend

Decline, if any, unknown. (This is an estimate of change in the portion of the total range that is occupied or utilised; it may not equal the change in total range.)

Knowledge of distribution in Australia

Broad range limits or habitat associations are known, but local occurrence cannot be predicted accurately.

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Demonstration site only. Content taken from Frogs Australia Network website.