Bombina orientalis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikipedia:How to read a taxobox
How to read a taxobox
Oriental Fire-bellied Toad
Oriental Fire-bellied ToadBombina orientalis
Oriental Fire-bellied Toad
Bombina orientalis
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Bombinatoridae
Genus: Bombina
Species: B. orientalis
Binomial name
Bombina orientalis
Boulenger, 1890

The Oriental Fire-bellied Toad, (Bombina orientalis) is a small (4 cm, 2") semi-aquatic frog species.

Contents

[edit] Description

Oriental fire-bellied toads are the most easily recognizable species of Bombina. They are bright green, with black mottling, and a bright orange, yellow or red underside. The skin on their dorsal side is covered in small tubercles. Although its common name is 'toad', the Fire-Bellied Toad is not a member of the toad family (Bufonidae)- so it may properly also be called a frog.

In the wild, B. orientalis eat various types of small aquatic arthropods (among other things) from which they obtain Carotene, which is used to color their bellies. In captivity, providing a source of Beta-Carotene (such as carrots) to the prey insects (crickets) early in a frog's adult stage allows it to develop brighter coloration.

[edit] Habitat

Like other Bombina species, B. orientalis is mostly aquatic, inhabiting warm, humid forested regions. They spend most of their time soaking in shallow pools, among dense vegetation.

[edit] Reproduction

Breeding takes place in the spring with the warming of the weather and increase in rain. Males call to the females with a light barking croak. They jump onto the back of any other fire-bellied toad that happens to pass by, often leading to male-male confusion, but rarely any sort of fighting. Females lay anywhere from 40 to 100 eggs in a large cluster, usually around submerged plants, near the water's edge. Tadpoles hatch from the eggs in 3-10 days depending on the temperature of the water. The larvae begin to develop legs in 6-8 weeks, and are fully metamorphosed and begin venturing on land in 12-14 weeks.

[edit] In captivity

In the United States, B. orientalis is commonly kept as a pet. They are generally a hardy species that do well in captivity if given good water quality. They are commonly fed with small crickets dusted with a calcium powder. They can also be fed with other small insects and grubs. They should not be fed mealworms, as these larva possess hard shells which Fire-bellied Toads have a hard time digesting or passing.

Fire-bellied Toads are usually fed live food. They only hunt prey which moves, ignoring any food item which is too slow or still. Some keepers have success by "hand" feeding food items, attaching pieces to a long piece of wood or straw and waving it in front of the frogs. Oriental Fire-Bellied Toads can be trained to accept food in this manner.

Because members of the Bombina genus have short, round tongues that cannot be pushed out of the mouth, Fire-bellied Toads cannot spit out items that have been accidentally taken into the mouth. As a result, their enclosures must not include gravel of a size which may be accidentally ingested. Larger rocks, or sand, may be used instead. An animal which swallows a piece of gravel it cannot pass will die unless it receives medical attention.

In captivity, Oriental Fire-bellied Toads have lived for more than a dozen years, with 15 years being common.

Oriental Fire-bellied Toads should be kept in water, with some kind of land or island which allows them to periodically climb out of the water. An ideal enclosure has plenty of land and water-based hiding places, as well as a land-based location suitable for depositing live food. Fire-bellied Toads have a sensitivity to chlorine - tap water should be treated or allowed to stand for several days, to allow chlorine to dissipate, before adding it to their environment.

[edit] References