The regular hunting-time begins with the evening and is continued throughout bright nights, the toads crawling and hopping about. They are expert climbers of rocks, and succeed in reaching apparently inaccessible places by shoving themselves up between vertical walls, and taking advantage of any roughnesses for foothold. Every few weeks they shed their skins. Without any preliminary symptoms or loss of appetite or liveliness, the body makes a few twisting motions, the back is now and then curved, and the skin splits down the middle line. Owing to the more forcible contortions of the body it slides down to the right and left of the back, whereupon the toad gets hold of the peeling-off skin with fingers and toes, scraping the head and sides, and conveys the thin, transparent, slightly tinged skin into the mouth, slips out of it backwards and swallows it. The new surface is then quite wet and shiny, but it soon dries and hardens.

Many toads, for instance the Common Toad and the Pantherine Toad, assume a peculiar attitude when surprised. Instead of blowing themselves up by filling their lungs with air, they raise themselves upon their four limbs as high as possible, but turning the back towards the enemy in a slanting position, either to the right or to the left side, apparently in order to present as much surface as possible, in other words to look their biggest.

Some of my specimens hibernated regularly for a few months, burying themselves completely in loose, dry soil, under leaves, or,–a favourite place,–in a heap of cocoa-nut fibre. Others, and this applies also to English specimens transferred from the garden into the greenhouse, are lively all the year round, but even they withdraw for an occasional sleep of a few weeks at any time of the year.

The whole family of large toads came to a sad end after four years, when they were put into new temporary quarters, a slate-bottomed terrarium. Being kept during my absence in wringing wet moss, which became fouled by their own excretions, they contracted a mysterious disease from which they never recovered. They are rather averse to wet surroundings, and except during the short pairing season they live in cool, shady places, preferably with just a little dampness. Occasionally they take a soaking bath. One specimen, living in the garden, repaired during the hot and dry summer nights to a standpipe in the garden, enjoying the occasional drips of water.

Considering the amount of snails and other noxious creatures destroyed by them during their regular nocturnal hunts, toads are eminently useful creatures. Nevertheless, they suffer much through the stupid superstition of people who ought to know better. It is difficult to find a gentle, absolutely harmless and useful creature that is more maligned than the European toad. It brings ill-luck to the house, the "slimy toad" spits venom, sucks the cows' udders and after that destroys their power of giving milk; it poisons the milk in the cellar, and a certain builder's horse, which was grazing in the grounds of the Cambridge Museums, and died there from a large concrement obstructing its bowels, was solemnly declared to have swallowed one of my toads. Silly superstitions, owing to faulty, or rather entire want of, observation! The toad is not slimy, but dry; it is often found in buildings, where it keeps down the woodlice; it cannot suck, nor does it drink at all; it does not spit venom, but becomes covered with milky white and very strong poison when in acute agony, for instance when trodden upon; and unless the big skin-glands be forcibly squeezed, there will be no squirting. Therefore, leave it alone, or put down food on its evening beat, and it will soon come to know and to recognise its friends.

The Common Toad can exist without food for a long time, provided the locality is cool and damp, but it wastes away almost to skin and bones. In order to disprove the persistently cropping up fable and sensational newspaper-accounts of toads having been discovered immured in buildings, where they were supposed to have lived for many years, Frank Buckland put a dozen specimens into separate holes bored in a block of porous limestone, covered them up tightly with a glass plate and buried the block a yard deep in the soil. A second dozen were treated similarly, but were put into a block of dense sandstone. After a year and two weeks all the toads enclosed in the latter block were of course found dead and decomposed, but most of those in the porous block were still alive, with their eyes open, and did not succumb to starvation until eighteen months of confinement. These poor creatures could of course not move about, and were practically undergoing enforced continuous hibernation. Otherwise they would soon have wasted away and have died within six months. Those which tumble into deep and dry wells remain rather small, but generally manage to keep alive for years on the spiders, woodlice, earwigs and other insects which likewise tumble in.

Toads hibernate far from the water in dry holes or clefts, retiring in the middle of October in Central Europe, and they do not reappear before March. Soon after, and this depends naturally upon the season, they congregate in ponds or pools, and the males, which far outnumber the females, for whom they fight, make a peculiar little noise, something like the whining bleat of a lamb, uttering this sound day and night. The male having, after much wrestling with competitors, secured a female, which is often several times bigger than himself, clasps her tightly, by pressing his fists into the armpits, and the pair swim or crawl about in this position sometimes for a week before the spawning takes place. The number of eggs laid at one sitting is enormous, varying from 2000 to 7000. They are very small, only 1.5-2.0 mm. in diameter, and are expelled in two double rows or strings, one coming out of each oviduct. These strings consist of a soft gelatinous mass, in which the double rows of entirely black eggs are imbedded, and they measure in the swollen condition about 6 mm. or ¼ inch in diameter, and from 10 to 15 feet in length. The strings are wound round and between water-plants by the parents, which move about during the laying and fertilising process. According to the coldness or warmth of the season the larvae are hatched in about a fortnight, and for the next few days they hang on to the dissolving gelatinous mass of the egg-strings. They then leave the slime and fasten themselves by means of their suckers to the under side of grasses and water-plants or sticks, with their tails hanging downwards, still in a rudimentary condition, but henceforth progressing rapidly.

Fischer-Sigwart[[80]] found the time of development as follows:–The eggs were laid on the 6th of March; the larvae left the jelly on the 16th, being 4 mm. long. On the 2nd of April they measured 13 mm.; on the 25th, 20 mm. On the 7th of May the hind-limbs appeared. On the 18th of May the tadpoles had reached their greatest length, namely 24 mm., and this is a rather small size for so large a species. The fore-limbs broke through on the 28th, and the metamorphosis was completed eighty-five days after the eggs were laid, the creatures leaving the water on the 30th of May. The tadpoles showed a preference for rotten pieces of Agaricus, which were floating in the water. The little baby-toads are surprisingly small, scarcely 15 mm. long, and live in the grass, under stones, in cracks of the ground, and hop about in much better style than their heavier and more clumsy-looking parents. Where many broods have been hatched they can be met with in myriads, the ground literally swarming with them, and as they are naturally stirred up by a sudden warm rain, perhaps after a drought, people will occasionally state it as an observed and well-ascertained fact that "it has rained toads."

What becomes of all these hopeful little creatures? Although it takes them fully five years to reach maturity, one would expect that the whole country would be swarming with toads; but since this is not the case, there being not more toads now than there were before, it follows that their enormous fecundity is only just sufficient to keep the race going. Adult toads seem to have scarcely any enemies except the Grass Snake, which takes them in default of anything better. But how about the reduction where there are no snakes? We know nothing about epidemics which might carry them off, but elderly toads are liable to a horrible disease produced by various kinds of flies, notably by Lucilia bufonivora and Calliphora silvatica, the maggots of which somehow or other eat their way from the nostrils into the brain and into the eyes. Those which reach the brain at first produce effects similar to those of Coenurus cerebralis, the hydatid or bladder-worm of sheep. The toad inclines its head towards one side, and cannot crawl straight, but walks in a circle. By eating away the brain they gradually destroy the host's life. But if none enter the brain, and a few only find their way into the eye, they only impair or destroy its sight. Such toads show signs of pain, poking at or stroking the affected eye, which becomes inflamed, and ultimately remains enlarged, with the iris partially or entirely destroyed by the maggot, which does not develop further, but dies in the eye-chamber, this being really an unsuitable place for it. The eyesight is of course affected, and is mostly, but not in all cases, lost. Such half-blind individuals–the disease affecting sometimes one eye only–recover their health, and except for a little awkwardness, behave like normal specimens. This applies to Bufo vulgaris as well as to B. calamita. Australian Anura are cursed with a fly of their own, called Batrachomyia.[[81]]

B. vulgaris inhabits almost the whole of the Palaearctic region;–the whole of Europe, with the exception of Ireland, the Balearic Islands, Sardinia and Corsica. Northwards it extends to Trondhjem, and thence along a line drawn across Russia and Siberia to the Amoor. Its southern limit in Asia is indicated by a line drawn from the Caucasus through the Himalayas into China. In Asia Minor and in Persia it is absent. South of the Mediterranean it occurs only in Morocco and Algeria.