B. calamita.–The Natterjack is practically the representative of the Green Toad in Western Europe, but both species occur together in Denmark, Southern Sweden, and nearly the whole of Germany. Its southern limit is Gibraltar. In the British Isles it occurs in South-Western Ireland, in Co. Kerry, and in England and Wales, being however local, and preferring sandy localities, where it is found in considerable numbers. This predilection is shown by its frequency on the sandy dunes of most of the islands off the German and Dutch coast, where it may be seen running about in glaring sunshine.

Besides in the coloration, it differs from B. viridis in the following points. The little subarticular pads of the toe-joints are paired, not single, and the hind-limbs are decidedly shorter, so much so that this species cannot hop. But it runs well, like a mouse, generally in jerks, stopping every few seconds, and owing to this habit it is called the "running toad" by the field-labourers of Cambridgeshire. The skin is smooth, but less so than in B. viridis, owing to the slightly more prominent warts; the parotoids are small; a similar pair of glands lies on the upper surface of the fore-arm and another on the calf. The tympanum is rather indistinct. The ground-colour of the upper parts is light brownish yellow, with a green tinge and scattered green spots; most specimens have a narrow yellow stripe along the vertebral line and over the head. The under parts are white, more or less speckled with black. The iris is greenish yellow and speckled. The male, which is of the same size as the female,–very large specimens reaching 3 inches in length,–has a large subgular vocal sac, and develops nuptial brushes on the first three fingers, but the first lacks the thickened pad of B. viridis.

The yellow vertebral line is sometimes absent in specimens from the south of France and the Iberian Peninsula; and since these southerners are as a rule more handsomely marked, the green being more pronounced and arranged in larger patches, interspersed with red spots, they much resemble B. viridis. Boulenger, who has paid especial attention to this vertebral streak, which is a not uncommon design in various species of different families, has made the interesting observation that the streak has never been found in Danish and German specimens of B. viridis, where B. calamita occurs also, while it is not uncommon in B. viridis of Italy, South-Eastern Europe, Asia, and North Africa, where B. calamita is not found. Lastly, he remarks that in Eastern Asia, where neither B. viridis nor B. calamita with such a line occurs, the same character is assumed by some specimens of B. vulgaris. The only conclusion we can draw from these facts is, that for some unknown reason the streak is a desirable, but not necessary, possession, but that it is not kept by two species in the same country, B. viridis dropping it entirely where the typically streaked species, B. calamita, also occurs. The breeding season does not begin in England and Middle Europe until the end of April, in cold springs not before May, but it lasts for several months. The males, congregating in pools in great numbers, make a loud noise, each individual uttering a rattling note which lasts a few seconds, the repetition distending its bluish throat into the shape of a globe as large as its head. As the note is taken up by all the other males, a continuous chorus is established, which on warm and still nights can be heard nearly a mile off. Single croaks are uttered at any time of the day. The embrace, the male digging its fists into the armpits of the female, often takes place on land, near the edge of the water, to which they resort in the night for spawning. The egg-strings are slung around water-plants, unless the water is a mere puddle, and are much shorter than those of B. viridis, measuring only 5 to 6 feet, and containing altogether 3000 to 4000 eggs. The larvae, when hatched, are very small, imperfect, and blackish; the external gills last a very short time. The young tadpoles live on mud, subsisting on diatoms and low Algae; they are the smallest tadpoles of all the European kinds, scarcely reaching more than one inch in length, and they metamorphose quickly, the baby-toads leaving the water and running about in less than six weeks, when they are only 10 mm., scarcely three-eighths of an inch, in length. By the end of their second summer they are still only three-quarters of an inch long, and they do not reach maturity until the fourth or fifth year, with a size of 1½ to 2 inches; still smaller young males become mature several years before they are full grown.

Natterjacks stand captivity well and become very tame. When discovered, they first do their best to run away, instead of hiding or squatting down, and when caught they become covered with a slightly foamy lather, the exudation of their glands, which has a peculiar smell, reminding some people of gunpowder, others of india-rubber. They are not very particular as to food, all sorts of insects and earthworms being taken. Natterjacks are great climbers and diggers. Many of mine have established themselves in the peat with which the walls of the greenhouse are covered, where they have dug out, or enlarged, holes in which they pass the daytime, just peeping out with their bright eyes; others sit high up, always in dry places, and bask. In the evening they descend, hunting about on the ground, and occasionally they go into the water, whereupon they become quite flaccid and soft. When taken up and held between two fingers, being slightly pressed under the armpits, both sexes utter little jerky notes, as–by the way–most toads and frogs do under similar conditions.

In Cambridgeshire they frequent certain clay-pits surrounded by high and steep walls of sand, the breeding places of large colonies of sand-martins. During the months of May and June they are found in the shallow water, running about on the mud, sometimes swimming, in which they are not very proficient, and rarely diving. But they spend most of the time on land. Early in October they climb up and enter the holes of the sand-martins, or they dig large, deep burrows for hibernation, and the old males are the first to disappear.

B. mauritanica s. pantherina.–The "Pantherine Toad" is one of the few African species, and is one of the prettiest of all toads. The skin is almost smooth, although provided with porous glands. The parotoids are large, but flat; large glandular complexes on the legs or arms are absent. The tympanum is very distinct. The upper parts are adorned with a delicate pattern of dark-edged, rich brown or olive patches upon a light, buff-coloured ground; the under parts are uniform white; the male has a subgular vocal sac. The total length is 3 to 4 inches. This beautiful species is one of the gentlest, and it becomes tame enough to lap up food whilst sitting on one's hand. It lives entirely upon insects, prefers shade and dusky light, and utters a sound like "kooh-rr." It is a native of North-Western Africa, Algiers, and Morocco. In the rest of Africa, from Egypt to the Cape, Senegambia to Abyssinia, it is represented by B. regularis. This species has often little spiny tubercles upon the warts, and occasionally a light vertebral line; the colour of the upper parts either closely resembles that of the previous species, or it is uniform light brown, while the under parts are whitish, or variegated with brownish patches. West African specimens are the smallest, only 2 inches long; those of the Cape are the largest, reaching 5 to 6 inches.

The next two genera approach the Engystomatinae, and thereby lead from the arciferous towards the firmisternal type. The epicoracoid cartilages are narrow, and they scarcely overlap, so that by a further step in this direction they could easily fuse into the firmisternal condition. Another bond between these two genera and the Engystomatinae is their habits, they being ant-eaters of an extremely stout appearance, with exclusively short limbs and very small heads.

Myobatrachus gouldi, living in Australia, has a smooth skin, brown above, lighter beneath, and is about 2 inches long.

Rhinophrynus dorsalis of Mexico is remarkable for its tongue, which is elongated, subtriangular and free in front, so that it can be protruded directly–not by reversion as in other toads–and can be used for licking up the termites which seem to be its principal food. The body of this ugly creature is almost egg-shaped, and the head is merged into this mass, only the narrow truncated snout protruding. The limbs are very short and stout. The toes are more than half webbed, and there is a large oval, shovel-like metatarsal tubercle, covered with horn and used for digging. The general colour is brown, with a yellow stripe along the spine and with irregular spots and patches on the flanks and limbs. Total length 2 to 2½ inches.