On 5/14/2026 6:26 PM, 'AL RUBIN' via NatureList wrote:
> My problem is that this year, in our little backyard
> habitat, I.e. a garden pond, a “marsh”, a waterfall, and a short stream,
> there have been hardly ANY amphibians!
> Every previous year on April 15 (true, tho odd) we have heard the
> Am.Toads begin calling. This year to date we have heard maybe two toads
> trilling, and only heard them twice! What is going on?
* I'm blaming our local declines here on last summer's drought, which I
suppose was as serious in Rochester as it was in eastern Ontario. In
Bishops Mills we have small waves of juvenile Toads every 4-5 years, and
only hear calling from distances of what must be 500-800 m.
Maybe you have had some sort of ranavirus that has taken out multiple
species? If you can find a sick or moribund specimen you might be able
to get it tested, so you might ask the DEC who could do that.
We're going to scoop up some Toad tadpoles from Kemptville to see if we
can boost the local Toad population from our little pond, and you might
do that for the species for which you can get eggs or tadpoles.
fred.
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> In the whole history of our little habitat, begun in
> the late '90s, we have always had a vigorous population of toads
> singing, sometime overpoweringly, through June!
>
> We have seen Green Frogs, several times, probably 4-5 at one time, but
> haven’t heard them calling yet. (It’s probably early for them.)
>
> And our small Spring Peeper population has not been heard at all. These
> little guys were declining a bit each year, a small backyard “wetland”
> is not really a proper habitat for them, and I was always thrilled when
> each year some did persist, but now I think they are gone.
>
> But what about the Toads? I had come to think of them as indestructible!
> The pond is not vernal, and never dries out; it has water all year. Is
> this related to the sparseness of other reports of the dearth of
> amphibians coming from many Nature List folks?
>
> Any ideas? - Sara