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They are all at my house. Its unreal how loud those motherfuckers croak in the ditch around my house. It will honestly hurt your ears after a few minutes.
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We have a bunch here. Saw one today. He was red, guess from hibernating in the Georgia red clay. My son has named one that lives around our back porch. It's back again this year, he saw it a few days ago.
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Quoted: In Arizona and the SW, the reduced prevalence of horny toads is related to changes in the range caused by grazing patterns. Former patterns of grazing increased the number of anthills that resulted in a lot of horny toads everywhere. At least that’s what I heard from a dude that gets paid for it. And I do recall a shitload of anthills back during the fabled Golden Age of Horny Toads. View Quote There's something to this. I never saw one until last year, then they were everywhere. Attached File |
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Quoted: I'm central west. Exact same my entire life until about 3-5 years ago. About to call the fish cops and ask them WTF is going on. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: All over in Northern Illinois. I find them around my house and garage area alot. But the times I see them the most is out on the road after a heavy rain. They are all over the road and you can't help but drive over them. Food for the birds i guess. Hmmm, I'll have to play closer attention this year and see if there seems to be a decline. To be fair, I am no longer in the burbs, and in a rural area, so we probably see a bit more than areas more developed. I would think your area would be fairly similar to me though. |
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Quoted: Not long ago and for my entire life almost anything you flipped over in the daytime had a toad under it and every streetlight had several under it. When it rained there were so many on the streets you couldn't drive around them. Havent seen one in a while now. Anyone else have this? View Quote Where do you live? |
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You are just older and taller and don’t notice them like you were a kid.
Out mushroom hunting I see all sorts of stuff I don’t see in my day to day suburban life. |
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Quoted: Same here also missing are fire flies, Monarch butterflies, and the green lizards that their tail breaks off. They used to be all over when I was a kid but now nothing View Quote The green anoles had almost been totally replaced by those pink Mediterranean geckos around here (came in to Galveston in a load of Italian roof tiles after WW2), but it seems the deep freeze two years ago hit the geckos harder than the anoles, so I am seeing tons of anoles now and no geckos. |
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Quoted: Same here. We see them along our fence line, and in the back of the property near some water. They do seem fewer in number, but are still out there. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: All over in Northern Illinois. I find them around my house and garage area alot. But the times I see them the most is out on the road after a heavy rain. They are all over the road and you can't help but drive over them. Food for the birds i guess. Same here. We see them along our fence line, and in the back of the property near some water. They do seem fewer in number, but are still out there. Yea we have a pretty decent creek behind our house, with a wooded area, so it is probably ideal for them. I do think the pesticides being used in general probably play a part in creating less desirable environments, both with the chemicals, and less food because of less insects with the spraying. |
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Quoted: Not long ago and for my entire life almost anything you flipped over in the daytime had a toad under it and every streetlight had several under it. When it rained there were so many on the streets you couldn't drive around them. Havent seen one in a while now. Anyone else have this? View Quote Super sensitive to environmental toxins that are absorbed through their skin. |
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When I was a kid south of DFW, we had horned toads all over the place. We also had various other toads near the creek and pond. My brother says they aren't around any more for some reason.
Back in Virginia, we would get what I referred to as "screamatodes". They'd puff up under their mouth and let loose an incredible racket. They'd all scream at the same time trying to attract a mate. They didn't even care that we walked right up to them. They'd still scream. I guess they only have a certain amount of time to find a GF so a guy has to do what a guy has to do. Down here along the Gulf Coast, we have both anoles and geckos. I did see one horned toad last year but that was it. |
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They’re usually thick during wheat harvest. Got some fat ones that sit right under the shop lights catching bugs at night.
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They are still around here in central Illinois, but the numbers seem to be way down from what I remember as a kid.
Same with other things like fuzzy caterpillars. I imagine agricultural advancements in pest resistant crops along with pesticide use has put a major dent in the insect population Even deeper than that, agricultural use of herbicide and fungicide has done significant damage to the microbiome and soil composition. More Brawndo!!! |
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Quoted: They are still around here in central Illinois, but the numbers seem to be way down from what I remember as a kid. Same with other things like fuzzy caterpillars. I imagine agricultural advancements in pest resistant crops along with pesticide use has put a major dent in the insect population Even deeper than that, agricultural use of herbicide and fungicide has done significant damage to the microbiome and soil composition. More Brawndo!!! View Quote Shits tarded, but tards can't think of even first order effects, much less 3rd and 4th order effects. |
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Quoted: You are just older and taller and don't notice them like you were a kid. Out mushroom hunting I see all sorts of stuff I don't see in my day to day suburban life. View Quote |
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I see toads every now and then when I am out riding my dirt bike.
If we see one on the trail we'll stop and move the little guy out of the way. |
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I think they come and go.
For a very long time(years maybe a decade or 2 or more) we didn't have lizards. Only geckos. Never had geckos in the 80s. Now the lizards are back and rarely see a gecko. This guy here is sacrificing it all to bring back the lizard population. And he's having fun doing it! Attached File |
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I didn't have as many toads, but we did have a bunch.
One thing I KINOW has changed is the number of red ants and the number of Horned Lizards, Horney Toad, etc. When I was a kid growing up in PHX and spending summers in White Mountains we constantly had to be on the alert for red ants. Not anymore though. The number of red ants is way down in the valley and most of AZ, but so are the number of Horned lizards that depended on ant populations. |
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Quoted: Not long ago and for my entire life almost anything you flipped over in the daytime had a toad under it and every streetlight had several under it. When it rained there were so many on the streets you couldn't drive around them. Havent seen one in a while now. Anyone else have this? View Quote Visit Lou_Dak and look in his toilets. He got you covered. |
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They are everywhere in the swamp I call home. They vex my dachshunds and and make them foam at the mouth, at least a couple of times til they learn.
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We used to have tons of different frogs and toads in the neighborhood when I was a kid in the 80s and 90s. When you stepped outside at night you could hear them all the way down the street.
They were mostly gone in the early 2000s. Now I hardly hear them anymore. |
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Quoted: There is a fungus that is attacking amphibians worldwide. Some amphibians are very resistant to it, so there numbers are maintaining, many aren't and they are going extinct. View Quote This is the most correct. The global amphibian decline has been going on since the 1970's. The decline is real and well documented. Many theorys why, but no one knows for sure the cause. You can google it to find out more information. |
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Beavis and Butthead - Frog Sucking |
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Quoted: I think they come and go. For a very long time(years maybe a decade or 2 or more) we didn't have lizards. Only geckos. Never had geckos in the 80s. Now the lizards are back and rarely see a gecko. This guy here is sacrificing it all to bring back the lizard population. And he's having fun doing it! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/257708/1000001361_jpg-3199967.JPG View Quote They do. Pretty much everything in nature is on a boom and bust cycle. |
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I live rural, 50 miles NW of the shitty of Houston. Still common to see the roads covered with the little penny frogs while it's raining,Yeserday I was outside at dusk, as soon as the first firefly blinked the croaking set off as if it was on cue. The trees are full of loud ass croakers all summer. My dog pack reacts to them with more noise, which the croakers ignore
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Just get a pool. You will be cleaning them out of skimmers after every rain.
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Lot of them still running around coastal Carolina.
Tree frogs too. |
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The prevalent equivalent here is the American Toad and we have a ton of them.
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The population decrease is directly related to seventh grade science class experiments.
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Quoted: When was the last time you saw a horned toad? They used to be everywhere . . . not anymore. View Quote Horned toads primary food source is the red ant. But imported fire ants effectively displace red ants. Horned toads can't eat fire ants. So their food source is disappearing. With much less food, there are far fewer horned toads. |
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Quoted: The green anoles had almost been totally replaced by those pink Mediterranean geckos around here (came in to Galveston in a load of Italian roof tiles after WW2), but it seems the deep freeze two years ago hit the geckos harder than the anoles, so I am seeing tons of anoles now and no geckos. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Same here also missing are fire flies, Monarch butterflies, and the green lizards that their tail breaks off. They used to be all over when I was a kid but now nothing The green anoles had almost been totally replaced by those pink Mediterranean geckos around here (came in to Galveston in a load of Italian roof tiles after WW2), but it seems the deep freeze two years ago hit the geckos harder than the anoles, so I am seeing tons of anoles now and no geckos. Cuban brown anoles have been replacing the native green anoles in big Texas cities like Houston for over a decade now. They got in on plants through big box stores, apparently. You know what the greens look like. The browns have mottled white spots all over their bodies and can change between shades of brown but can't turn green. |
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