Exploding Toads

impressive

Literotica Guru
Joined
Sep 11, 2003
Posts
27,372
http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,154948,00.html

Crows May Be to Blame for Exploding Toads

Thursday, April 28, 2005

BERLIN — Why are toads puffing up and spontaneously exploding in northern Europe? It began in a posh German neighborhood and has spread across the border into Denmark. It's left onlookers baffled, but one German scientist studying the splattered amphibian remains now has a theory: Hungry crows may be pecking out their livers.

"The crows are clever," said Frank Mutschmann (search), a Berlin veterinarian who collected and tested specimens at the Hamburg pond. "They learn quickly from watching other crows how to get the livers."

So far, more than 1,000 toad corpses have been found at a pond in Hamburg and in Denmark. But the pond water in Hamburg has been tested, and its quality is no better or worse than elsewhere in the city. The remains have been checked for a virus or bacteria, but none has been found.

Based on the wounds, Mutschmann said, it appears that a bird pecks into the toad with its beak between the amphibian's chest and abdominal cavity, and the toad puffs itself up as a natural defense mechanism.

But, because the liver is missing and there's a hole in the toad's body, the blood vessels and lungs burst and the other organs ooze out, he said.

As gruesome as it sounds, it isn't actually that unusual, he said.

"It's not unique — it's in a city area, and that makes it spectacular," Mutschmann said. "Of course, it's something very dramatic."

There have also been reports of exploded toads in a pond near Laasby in central Jutland in Denmark.

Local environmental workers in Hamburg have described it as a scene out of a horror or science fiction movie, with the bloated frogs agonizing and twitching for several minutes, inflating like a balloon before suddenly bursting.

"It's horrible," biologist Heidi Mayerhoefer (search) was quoted as telling the Hamburger Morgenpost daily.

"The toads burst, the entrails slide out. But the animal isn't immediately dead — they keep struggling for several minutes."

Hamburg's Institute for Hygiene and the Environment (search) regularly tests water quality in the city, and found no evidence that the toads were diseased. The institute even ruled out that the toads were suffering because of a fungus brought in from South America.

Other theories have been that horses on a nearby track infected them with a virus, or even that the toads are taking the selfless way out — sacrificing themselves by suicide to save others from overpopulation.

Could hungry crows be a reasonable answer?

"We haven't seen that. It might be, it might not be," said institute spokeswoman Janne Kloepper. "It's speculation," until it's observed, she said.

Local officials in Hamburg were advising residents to stay away from the pond dubbed by German tabloids, "the death pool."
 
I read that yesterday.

It's quite sad if not disturbing.

Very curious indeed.
 
I read that yesterday too...

Interesting to say the least.

Sincerely,
ElSol
 
It's probably very wrong that I found that funny, isn't it?

The Earl
 
TheEarl said:
It's probably very wrong that I found that funny, isn't it?

The Earl

Uh, welllll, actually I wouldn't say wrong 'wrong', more like wrong 'improper'.

But you had company in your amusement :p

RI-BOOM!!!

Sincerely,
ElSol
 
I haven't heard about this one. The idea of Crows eating the Livers out of the Toads somehow doesn't ring true though. I would love to see the follow up on this one.

Cat

Oh and one word for those living in the affected area.
Incoming!
 
I don’t buy that crow theory, either.

. . . the pond water in Hamburg . . . quality is no better or worse than elsewhere in the city . . .

That statement just makes me wonder how bad the water quality is everywhere in Hamburg.

My guess is that the toads are trying to teleport, and so far, all they have been able to do is project their livers through the walls of their abdomen.

The crucial question is, to where are the toads trying to teleport, and will we welcome them when they arrive?
 
Laugh all you want, but there's been a worldwide scarcity of frogs and toads that's been going on for about 30 years now and no one has any idea why.

The frog population is some midwesterrn lakes has just disappeared.

News story follows:
===========

This story may be a lot more important than it appears on the surface. It is more than a story about how frogs are becoming more scarce. For nearly 30 years, scientists have watched the worldwide frog population decline. But now they are becoming alarmed.

In part, they say, it is due to a loss of habitat and over-harvesting.

But that does not explain it all.

The questions are: Why are they disappearing? Is their thinning population an indication of something even more significant going on in the environment?

This story could be easily localized in many parts of the country. Check your university biology department, local zoo, aquarium, or science museum for sources.

The Baltimore Sun reports:

One of the oldest life forms on Earth is disappearing, and no one knows why.

The number of amphibians-- a class of creature that predates the dinosaur and includes frogs, toads and salamanders-- is declining across the world at astonishing rates.

Costa Rica's golden toad vanished from a pristine wildlife refuge in about three years. Fewer chorus frogs are singing in upstate New York, and the Mississippi gopher frog has all but disappeared from the Southeast.

There could be many reasons: Climate change, habitat loss, man-made pollutants, and recently discovered diseases. But researchers acknowledge that they have no clear answers as to why so many extinctions are occurring worldwide -- and at such alarming rates.

"There isn't any one angle, or one cause that we know of," said James Hanken, an amphibian expert at Harvard University. "We really don't know the reasons for all these declines."

There is more is at stake than the fate of some water-soaked croakers. Amphibians have been around for 350 million years. Living on water and land, they're among the most ecologically sensitive creatures on Earth. They're a major food source for birds, fish and mammals, and they gobble up disease-bearing insects. So their demise could be a signal that other wildlife is at risk.

http://poynteronline.org/dg.lts/id.2/aid.72959/column.htm

And more:

http://www.sustainable-city.org/articles/frogs.htm
 
Last edited:
dr_mabeuse said:
Laugh all you want, but there's been a worldwide scarcity of frogs and toads that's been going on for about 30 years now and no one has any idea why.

I think they all might be in our woods/fields/ponds. The frog song on warm spring nights is deafening!
 
dr_mabeuse said:
Laugh all you want, but there's been a worldwide scarcity of frogs and toads that's been going on for about 30 years now and no one has any idea why.

Not a cheerful thought. I seem to recall that amphibians are meant to be good indicators of environmental toxins. They are affected more easily because their skins are semi-permeable.

I agree that the liver theory seems odd ... is there some reason why a crow would only want the liver and not the rest?
 
dr_mabeuse said:
Laugh all you want, but there's been a worldwide scarcity of frogs and toads that's been going on for about 30 years now and no one has any idea why.

Hey don't look at me on this one. Yeah I know Frogs taste good, but not that good. And I don't eat Toads! Besides, I've been too busy making a dent in the South East Florida Rattle Snake population to bother with these other critters. :D

Cat
 
I got involved in a big kerfluffle over that exploded whale story.

I knew I had seen footage about that detonation. (It couldn't have been the original broadcast.)

For some reason I mentioned it in a conversation, but no one else had heard about it, or remembered it.

They all claimed that (1) I made it up. (2) I had mistaken someone's joke for truth, and/or (3) I read too much science fiction.

Since this was before I had a computer, I could not search the internet for proof that I was correct. (I did go to the Library to try to find the story, but in questioning a Librarian was told that someone must be pulling my leg, there was no such incident.)

Eventually, much too late, I was able to find the story.

I remember the incident now, as a demonstration of how, when enough uninformed people agree, it is the person with the truth who is wrong.
 
Back
Top